Skip to main content

Chinese to lead in electric vehicles?

Chinese manufacturers are keen to set a lead in the market for electric vehicles, which is seen as a major business opportunity for the future.
February 17, 2012 Read time: 2 mins
Chinese manufacturers are keen to set a lead in the market for electric vehicles, which is seen as a major business opportunity for the future. Professor CC Chan is president of the 2786 World Electric Vehicle Association and at a recent conference on electric vehicles he said, "By 2020, there is a potential for global EV totals of around 7-12% of total global production volumes."

Professor Chan is widely seen as a pioneer in the global EV field and he also claimed, "China will take a lead in the world, with electric vehicles making up to 15-20% of the total Chinese vehicle output by 2020."

An optimistic take on the market for EVs was presented and this suggests a potential for over two million of these vehicles worldwide by 2015. Even taking a more conservative outlook, professor Chan said that worldwide, electric vehicles could total 4% of the world's fleet by 2020, with 521,000 electric vehicles globally by 2015. He says that China is well placed to take advantage of this market potential due to factors such as low labour costs and a huge home market.

Professor Chan said he thinks that there are two possible routes for a market for millions of EVs. The first will be through persuading customers in markets such as the US, Europe and Japan to consider innovative electric vehicles as alternatives to combustion engine vehicles.

He said that the second will be through finding new customers, primarily from China and India, who require low cost EVs.

Collaborations between industries serving the two, along with collaborations with electric bike and two-wheel manufacturers, will lead to new technology breakthroughs and lower developmental and production costs, according to professor Chan. He added, "Real innovation won't take place until 2016, after second generation electric vehicles become available."

Cost reduction will need to go hand in hand with innovation in order to achieve a consumer 'mass market.' In addition, he believes that components for hybrids will become integrated and simpler. Currently, electric vehicles use about 5,000 parts as opposed to internal combustion engine (ICE) vehicles, which use about 30,000 parts.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Caterpillar’s hybrid excavator uses evolutionary technology
    September 27, 2013
    Caterpillar’s hybrid excavator represents evolutionary rather than revolutionary technology - Mike Woof reports One of the key things to understand about Caterpillar’s hybrid excavator is that its fuel savings come not from a single technology, but from a range of features that have been integrated together. The sophisticated engine works hand in hand with the advanced hydraulics, with electronics governing the whole operation and optimising efficiency. And while none of these technologies is new in it
  • Asian bitumen producers look overseas for business opportunities
    March 4, 2015
    While demand in some parts of Asia is strong, other countries such as China have been suffering from oversupply - World Highways reported from the Argus Asia-Pacific and Middle East Bitumen Conference in Singapore. Asia overtook the Americas as the world’s largest consumer of bitumen in 2012, with China accounting for the lion’s share – nearly two-thirds – of consumption. However, attendees at the Argus Asia-Pacific and Middle East Bitumen Conference held in Singapore on 24th-26th September last year heard
  • Lowering construction machine exhaust emissions
    November 6, 2017
    The alternatives to diesel fuel as a power source continue to grow as firms move to cut emissions - Mike Woof writes. Only the most myopic could have failed to notice that times are changing in terms of engine technology. In the on-highway automotive sector as well as for the off-highway construction machine segment, manufacturers are looking to lower tailpipe emissions. Similar technologies have been employed in both on-highway and off-highway sectors, although those solutions have been adapted to better
  • CECE Summit – is Europe ready for a digital construction worksite?
    November 20, 2015
    The CECE has voiced his concern over government regulations that could strangle innovation for the digitalisation of construction machinery. China’s imploding economy was another topic at the recent conference in Brussels, reports David Arminas. The CECE has urged the European Parliament and European Commission to enact legislation that promotes rather than hinders the construction sector’s transition to a digitalised way of working. “We need a smart regulatory framework that helps to unlock the full poten