China's electric car capital has lessons for the rest of world

Published Mon, Jun 28, 2021 · 09:50 PM

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Liuzhou

ONE of the first things visitors to the southern Chinese city of Liuzhou notice is the quiet. Missing is the incessant noise of throbbing engines and clashing gears that provides the backdrop to daily life in most metropolises around the globe.

The reason: almost 30 per cent of the cars sold in Liuzhou last year were electric, said WAYS Information Technology, a Guangzhou-based consulting firm, more than five times China's average - making the city of four million the effective capital of the biggest electric vehicle (EV) market in the world. Globally, it trails only Oslo for EV penetration. Not only that, but Liuzhou's air and water quality is among the best in a nation synonymous with choking pollution.

This green dividend is an unexpected bonus of a push by city authorities to make Liuzhou an EV manufacturing hub, and a concerted effort to overcome concerns over range, reliability and battery safety that have held back electric car take-up globally. Working with local carmaker SAIC-GM-Wuling Automobile - whose tiny, dirt cheap EV has been China's top seller for most of the past nine months, beating even Tesla - they also rolled out a slew of incentives, from extensive test drives to free parking and tens of thousands of charge points, to encourage people to buy electric cars.

It's an approach that may provide a blueprint for other cities around the world as they try to convince drivers to give up their gas guzzlers to meet ambitious emissions targets.

While governments from Germany to the US offer subsidies on EV purchases, sales still lag well behind those for conventional cars outside of a few pockets in Europe like Norway and Sweden. Liuzhou's strategy may also be instructive for legacy carmakers like General Motors and Volkswagen, which are pumping tens of billions of dollars into a high-stakes bet that the future is electric. New-energy vehicles accounted for just under 4.5 per cent of global passenger vehicle sales last year, according to BloombergNEF.

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"At the beginning, people had many concerns about EVs, such as safety or the convenience of charging," Gou Yi, a deputy chief at Liuzhou's branch of the National Development and Reform Commission, China's top economic planner, said in an interview. "What we did was to make sure our citizens felt it's very comfortable to use EVs. People have realised how economical and easy electric cars are, and how much cleaner our air has become after more and more EVs hit the roads."

Liuzhou's first move was to expose wary residents to EVs. SAIC-GM-Wuling, a joint venture between US giant General Motors and state-backed SAIC Motor and Guangxi Automobile Group, carried out a free 10-month test-drive campaign in 2017. More than 15,000 people took the carmaker's Baojun E100 for a spin, providing the company with 12,000 items of feedback. The trial was so popular that available slots ran out within minutes, and 70 per cent of test-drivers bought one of the vehicles.

Wuling then studied residents' needs and driving habits, tailoring the Baojun E100 for a daily commute of less than 30 kilometres. The pint-sized two-seater - about half the length of a Tesla Model X and similar in appearance to the Smart car - comes with a similarly small price tag of around US$5,000. That not only helps lower the bar for ownership, but reduces running costs such as insurance.

In a further incentive, drivers could earn cash rewards of up to 1,000 yuan (S$208) a year for driving up to 10,000 km. The mini cars - which are everywhere in Liuzhou - also allowed the government to create 15,000 additional parking spots around the city. Their size meant they could fit on previously unusable tracts of land, such as the sidewalk verge.

That's what appealed to 30-year-old bank worker Zhang Jiageng, who said the cost of using his Baojun E200 is almost unnoticeable. He pays about 0.1 yuan per km for charging and gets unlimited free parking at the designated electric-vehicle parking lots, or two hours free in regular car parks. Mr Zhang said he barely drives his other car, a Subaru SUV.

"If you make EVs that are affordable and convenient, then they will replace people's bike, scooter or whatever else they might be commuting on," said Bill Russo, CEO of advisory firm Automobility in Shanghai.

As the cars can be charged from a regular household socket, Wuling could install charging points throughout Liuzhou for a fraction of the cost of typical EV infrastructure. There are now around 30,000 charging outlets in the city. In another lure for buyers, electric cars can be driven in dedicated bus-lanes, a time-saving privilege during rush hour or traffic jams.

Unlike in the west, Liuzhou's main motivation for embracing EVs was to strengthen the local vehicle industry, which contributes to about half of the city's industrial output. China has made dominating the new era of cars a national priority, and local policy makers took advantage of that focus, securing support and funding from Beijing. The strategy is paying off for Liuzhou: vehicle industrial output surged 64 per cent in the first quarter on the back of soaring demand for EVs, which more than tripled.

And the environmental benefits are there. Liuzhou retains older heavy industry - steel mills still dot the horizon, belching out plumes of white smoke - but the water quality of the Liujiang River that snakes through the city was ranked No 1 among China's inland rivers last year. Daily air quality was rated excellent about 97 per cent of the time in 2020, compared to just 76 per cent in Beijing. Liuzhou plans to provide even more support to the sector, by encouraging the localisation of supply chains, and backing technology innovation and exports. The aim is to double vehicle-industry output to 500 billion yuan by 2030, said Mo Chunyan, a deputy head of the local branch of the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology.

Provincial authorities in Guangxi, the area surrounding Liuzhou, are trying to expand the strategy to other cities, including in other parts of China. BLOOMBERG

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