Volkswagen is on track for its smallest year of China sales since 2012, according to CNBC analysis of public data for the first three quarters of the year.
BYD is currently the second largest EV company here in Australia despite just having 1 model. With the Dolphin launched 2 weeks ago, the Seal coming early 2024 along with a pickup and possibly another SUV, I won’t be surprised they take #1.
The MG4 also won our car of the year in Australia. The MG4 also won car of the year in the UK I believe.
5 years ago, 1 in 100 Australian drove a Chinese brand car. Today that is 1 in 10 Australian. If you include cars made in china, that becomes 1 in 5 Australian.
We’re seeing the same cycle repeat itself, the same is happening today with Chinese cars what happened with Japanese and Korean cars decades ago. Western makers with their gas guzzler land yachts resting on their laurels losing the battle against more efficient and better built Asian products, sending them into a panic where the only recourse they have is to beg the government to issue protectionist policies to prevent them from being swept away. It would make sense if the Western cars were still made locally, but in the globalised and heavily automated economy of today I don’t see governments finding it too worthwhile to kneecap their own energy transition just to protect a couple thousand jobs that can be retrained into other industries anyway.
BYD is currently the second largest EV company here in Australia despite just having 1 model. With the Dolphin launched 2 weeks ago, the Seal coming early 2024 along with a pickup and possibly another SUV, I won’t be surprised they take #1.
The MG4 also won our car of the year in Australia. The MG4 also won car of the year in the UK I believe.
5 years ago, 1 in 100 Australian drove a Chinese brand car. Today that is 1 in 10 Australian. If you include cars made in china, that becomes 1 in 5 Australian.
We’re seeing the same cycle repeat itself, the same is happening today with Chinese cars what happened with Japanese and Korean cars decades ago. Western makers with their gas guzzler land yachts resting on their laurels losing the battle against more efficient and better built Asian products, sending them into a panic where the only recourse they have is to beg the government to issue protectionist policies to prevent them from being swept away. It would make sense if the Western cars were still made locally, but in the globalised and heavily automated economy of today I don’t see governments finding it too worthwhile to kneecap their own energy transition just to protect a couple thousand jobs that can be retrained into other industries anyway.