Bloomberg
China Evergrande Group, the property giant with ambitions to become the world’s biggest maker of electric vehicles, plans to unveil its debut car by June — a year later than first promised.
The car, to be sold under the ‘Hengchi’ brand, will debut in the first half of next year, with mass production starting in 2021, the company said in a statement.
Evergrande — which has spent more than $3.6 billion since late last year on an array of EV-related companies and pledged to invest billions more — had promised to deliver its first ‘pure battery’ car by June this year, but instead unveiled a model car under a Swedish subsidiary.
China’s biggest property developer by revenue has branched out into a suite of businesses from soccer to healthcare. At a deal-signing event, Chairman Hui Ka Yan said the company still aims to become the world’s biggest maker of EVs, and it had to move fast despite a lack of technology and experience.
“For core technology and companies available to be purchased, we’ll buy them all,†Hui told more than 200 potential partners in Guangzhou, according to a webcast of the event. “For those we couldn’t buy, we’d like to join hands with them through cooperation.â€
Hui, China’s third-richest man with an estimated wealth of $26.7 billion, earlier this year said Evergrande “will strive to become the world’s biggest, and the strongest, electric vehicle group within three to five years.â€
Not only does that pit him against Elon Musk’s Tesla Inc, which has been churning out EVs for years, but also all the world’s major automakers, which are plowing tens of billions of dollars into EV production and research.
Evergrande will also be entering a crowded local field, at a time sales are slumping as the government reduces subsidies.
Warren Buffett-backed BYD Co, the world’s biggest maker of new energy vehicles, last month reported an 89% slump in third-quarter earnings and warned profit could fall as much as 43% this year. BAIC BluePark New Energy Technology Co also forecast a 2019 loss in a grim earnings update.
Meantime, Tesla has completed its new factory near Shanghai and is nearing the launch of China-made models.
Undeterred, Evergrande said it’s sticking to a long-term production-capacity of 5 million vehicles a year. Annual sales of passenger EVs in China only surpassed 1 million units for the first time last year, according to BNEF.
Tesla granted permit for China production
Bloomberg
Tesla Inc won permission to start mass production at its China factory, clearing one of the last hurdles to begin selling locally built cars in the world’s largest electric-vehicle market.
The clearance was disclosed by China’s Ministry of Industry and Information Technology on its website Wednesday.
Tesla unveiled its first vehicles assembled at the Shanghai facility earlier this month, made as part of trial operations.
The plant wholly is a crucial test of CEO Elon Musk.