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China Unveils New EV Under $10K

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There are countless reasons why consumers are reluctant to switch to electric vehicles, with pricing consistently listed as a top concern. Western governments have warned that they will ban fossil fuel vehicle production in the not-so-distant future to meet emissions targets despite lacking the infrastructure or demand for EVs. Every government is hoping that consumers will purchase their new EVs domestically but no one has been able to compete with Chinese EV manufacturing.

China has pumped over $230 billion into its growing EV sector since 2009. Batteries account for around 40% of the total cost of EVs, and companies like BYD are able to maintain low prices are they own the supply chain to create these batteries from the raw materials to the finished packs. BYD has announced that its newest line will cost as little as $9,555, a price no other EV manufacturer has been able to provide.

Additionally, the company has installed its “God’s Eye” driver-assistance system in three models priced under 100,000 yuan ($13,688), providing users with an autonomous driving experience. Yale Zhang, managing director at Automotive Foresight, compared BYD’s developments to DeepSeek, which was developed to compete with ChatGPT at a fraction of the price. “Technology does not need to be high-end and they can fight a price war here,” he stated.

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This is especially dire news for Germany and, therefore, Europe, as its auto industry continually declines. Lawmakers refuse to back away from their climate pledges and are forcing manufacturers to make a premature switch without any demand. Volkswagen plans to close at least three factories by 2027 due to declining sales amid the country’s exigency to eliminate fossil fuels, and China has been eyeing their vacant facilities. Germany abandoned economic objectives for climate change objectives and believes it must reduce carbon emissions by 65% within a 5-year period, followed by an 88% reduction into 2040 before meeting gas net neutrality in 2045. China has no such restrictions.

China’s own auto industry grew 156% over a two-year period from 2021 to 2023 after exporting 4.14 million vehicles last year. China is not adhering to the climate change agenda, and those same regulations derived from fictional data are not strangling China’s energy-dependent sectors. Tariffs are preventing the Chinese from offloading EVs to the West.

Even with the 100% tariffs placed on Chinese autos by Canada and the US, this vehicle is far cheaper than any other available EV. These vehicles would be incredibly popular in the West, but rest assured they will find a way to prevent them from being imported or even street legal.