Sep 13, 2024 ESG

Chinese electric cars are in the fast lane

The electrification of the global vehicle fleet is progressing – which poses serious challenges for traditional carmakers, not least European ones.

China’s increasing presence in global EV car sales

Source: Bloomberg NEF Electric Vehicle Outlook 2024

Thanks to these successes, and perhaps also due to overcapacities that exceed even the rapid growth of their domestic market, Chinese brands have increasingly turned their attention abroad.[1] Lately, China’s automakers have been particularly successful in other emerging markets. In Brazil, passenger EV sales have nearly tripled in 2023 and China-based automakers now account for 76% of all EV sales.[2] To be sure, total EV sales still only represent less than 5% of all passenger car sales in Brazil.[3] But there are similar market share increases in other parts of the world, as our Chart of the Week shows. The share of Chinese automakers in Thailand's EV sales have increased from 46% in 2022 to 77% in 2023.[4] While their penetration in Europe markets remains significantly lower, growth has been swift since the first World EV Day in 2020. Back then, Chinese cars accounted for little more than 2% of total EVs sales in Europe; last year, their share reached 11%.

In response to the rising threat posed to their own domestic producers, calls have been getting louder in the U.S., the EU and Canada to impose higher tariffs on Chinese EV imports.[5]  In Europe, this follows an investigation that identified allegedly unfair subsidies benefiting Chinese EV producers. It would probably be more useful for politicians to focus on the rapid, comprehensive expansion of the charging infrastructure.[6] In any case, China’s dominance in the EV market is likely to continue in the near-term, as Chinese investments shift from battery production to EV manufacturing in Europe, with Hungary among the first EU member to receive significant Chinese EV-related foreign direct investment.[7]

European car makers face another threat namely consumer loyalty to established European premium brands. Such loyalties appear fragile when switching from internal combustion engines to electric cars. According to one survey, two-thirds of European customers are interested in buying an entirely new brand when making the move to an electric vehicle, with Asian disrupter brands appearing the most popular.[8]

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1. Financial Times, Lex, April 23, 2024, “Slumping EV sales should not ring alarm bells in Europe - yet: Financial Times, Lex, Sept. 6, 2024, For European carmakers, EVs are a Catch-22 The uncertain move towards electrification coupled with a slump in sales overall pose investment problems.”

2. Bloomberg New Energy Finance Electric Vehicle Outlook 2024

3. CleanTechnica, May 2024, “EV Sales Report: Brazil Races Ahead, Bringing 1,100% BEV Growth in April”

4. Bloomberg New Energy Finance, Electric Vehicle Outlook 2024

5. Reuters, Aug 20, 2024, “Tesla to get lower EU tariff on its Chinese-made EVs“

6. Financial Times, April 10, 2024, „The electric vehicle revolution is running out of steam: Governments need to work with carmakers to reduce the obstacles to adoption”

7. Peterson Institute for International Economics, May 30, 2024, “Europe remains open to Chinese investment in the electric vehicle sector: Major Chinese EV and EV battery manufacturing investments in Europe

8. McKinsey, December 22, 2022, “New EV entrants disrupt Europe’s automotive market”

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