China to get smart, clean car industry

MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 2017
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CHINA IS working on a national strategy on “smart cars”, and mulls banning production and sales of fossil fuel cars, policy makers told a forum on automotive industry developments.

With the global auto industry leaning toward intelligent and electric vehicles, work has begun on a timetable to ban manufacture and sales of traditional energy cars, said Xin Guobin, vice-minister of industry and information technology. 
He told the Tianjin forum that automakers should have a thorough understanding of the situation and readjust their strategies. 
The Ministry of Industry and Information Technology (MIIT) will work out the timetable, Xin said. 
Producing and selling more than 28 million vehicles in 2016, the eighth year as the world’s biggest producer and manufacturer, China’s auto industry contributed at least one tenth of total retail sales of consumer goods. 
China is also the largest producer and market for new energy vehicles, with more than 500,000 of them built and sold last year. There are more than 1 million new energy vehicles on the road, or half of the world total. 
To encourage development of new energy vehicles, subsidies of as much as half of the original price are available, but in the long term, such subsidies may lead to blind expansion by automakers, said Song Qiuling, a deputy section chief from the Ministry of Finance, at the forum. 
Subsidies will gradually be reduced and a new energy credit policy introduced, he said. 
On June 13, the MIIT released for public discussion a policy document about fuel consumption control and new energy vehicle credits. The document proposes requiring automakers to meet a new energy credit ratio of 8 percent in 2018, 10 percent in 2019, and 12 percent in 2020 to ease pressure on energy and environment. Xin confirmed that the policy would be put into effect in the near future. 
He said the time period up to 2025 would be critical for the auto industry. Energy-saving and emission reduction requirements are increasing, the development of new energy vehicles is becoming more technically demanding and intelligent vehicles are expected to have a profound effect on the industry.