EC March report: China is the future of electric cars
The
world awaits an electric-car future, but that future is rapidly
becoming the present in China. The country is on track to sell more than
1 million electric vehicles in 2018, nearly as much as the rest of the
world combined. And with tens of billions of dollars already invested to
build up an electric-car infrastructure (and tens of billions more on
the way), China is not letting up in its pace to become the world leader
in EVs, even as other countries mount their own efforts to compete for
the drivers of the future.
The
environmentally friend cars will be the future. Tesla is one of the
greatest electric cars today and all automotive companies are
researching for developing the electric cars manufacturing systems and
capabilities.
In
2018, more electric cars were sold in China than in the rest of the
world combined. The Chinese government has spent nearly $60 billion in
the last decade to create an industry that builds electric cars, while
also reducing the number of licenses available for gasoline-powered cars
to increase demand for electric cars. And Beijing plans to spend just
as much over the next decade.
No
other country in the world has made anywhere near as big an investment
or instituted as significant regulations. But then again, no country has
the same potential payoff as China. If its bet succeeds, China can look
forward to cleaner air, lower reliance on imported oil, and being a
technology leader in a new high-tech industry.
China
has 99% of the world’s 250 million electric two-wheelers. That’s nearly
100 times the total number of electric passenger cars in the world.
Starting in 1999, Beijing designated electric two-wheelers that can’t go
faster than 20 km per hour (12 mph) as “bicycles.” That meant they
could be used without a license or registration and ridden in bicycle
lanes. Next, it restricted the ownership of gasoline-powered
two-wheelers in the central parts of cities.
Big supply chain stock of electric cars:
The country is now applying what it learned with two-wheelers to accelerate the electrification of four-wheelers. Fun fact: Today, electric two-wheelers are so common in China that they account for 80% of all the greenhouse-gas emissions avoided by the use of electric vehicles in the entire world.China now has more than 100 electric-car makers, along with hundreds of additional companies that supply components for electric cars.
The most crucial and expensive of these components is the battery, and China now has a tight grip on the global supply of the elements needed to manufacture them. Batteries are made up of four components: anode, cathode, separator, and electrolyte. China currently controls between 50% and 77% of the global market for the raw materials of these components, according to Yano Research Institute.
Electric buses are becoming:
The total cost of owning an electric bus which is to say its upfront
price along with its lifetime fuel and maintenance costs is already
lower than that of gasoline-powered buses in much of the world. They’ll
be cheaper in all of the world within the next three years, according to
Blomberg New Energy Finance.
That makes sense. Electric vehicles are much more efficient, which means
they require less energy to move the same distance than a
gasoline-powered car. On top of that, for each unit of energy,
electricity is almost always cheaper than gasoline. Thus, the more an
electric vehicle runs for the cheaper it becomes. That makes fleet
vehicles, like buses and taxis, the best candidates for buying electric
versions. China currently makes 99% of the world’s electric buses, and
experts say it’s unlikely other countries will catch up anytime soon.
No comments