Europe steps up electric-car push to close gap with China

epa06306640 Electric cars stand on the Place des Nations in front of the United Nations headquaters on the occasion of the Swiss stage of the electric vehicles which participate in the Rally 'Light us road to COP23' in Geneva, Switzerland, 03 November 2017. The 23rd session of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change Conference (UNFCCC), the 2017 UN Climate Change Conference COP23 will take place from 06 to 17 November in Bonn, the seat of the Climate Change Secretariat, and is presided by Fiji.  EPA-EFE/MARTIAL TREZZINI

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Electric-car production in the EU got a spur on Wednesday as EU regulators acted to close a technological gap with China by seeking stricter emission curbs on manufacturers such as Volkswagen AG and Fiat Chrysler Automobiles NV.
The European Commission, the EU’s regulatory arm, proposed a 30 percent reduction in car discharges of carbon dioxide by 2030 compared with 2021 levels, as part of a stepped-up fight against global warming. The plan, which will progressively tighten existing CO2 limits, features incentives for automakers to shift to electric vehicles.
“There’s a component of trying to facilitate the development of a powerful car-manufacturing industry of electric vehicles,” Miguel Arias Canete, EU climate and energy commissioner, said. “There will be a race for developing clean-energy vehicles. We are seeing that others are taking the global lead.”
Europe is gearing up for a technological revolution in road transport that would push the traditional internal combustion engine from showrooms into museums in a bid to retain leadership in the worldwide market for passenger cars.
The commission is taking advantage of the landmark climate-protection agreement reached by almost 200 countries in Paris in late 2015 to get a grip on European road-transport pollution, which has bucked a general trend of falling EU discharges of greenhouse gases including CO2 that are blamed for climate change. Under the Paris accord, the EU aims to slash such pollution by at least 40 percent in 2030 compared with 1990.
As China expands its electric-vehicle prowess with the blunt policy of quotas, Europe is counting on a more nuanced approach that would force carmakers to choose between making the combustion engine cleaner or abandoning it in favour of electric vehicles.
“If you see what’s happening in the US and you see the figures of Tesla production in 2016 the production of Tesla cars was around 80,000 cars,” Canete said. “The big problem is China, which has a mandatory target of 10 percent in 2019, 12% in 2020 and 7.5 million vehicles per year in the future.”
The Chinese market already boasts 400 types of electric vehicles, whereas Europe has six, according to Canete. India aims for all new passenger cars sold by 2030 to be electric. “If you see the figures from the EU at the moment it’s 1 percent of the fleet,” Canete said.

epa04936962 A Ford logo at the second press preview day of International Motor Show IAA, Frankfurt, Germany, 15 September 2015. The 66th edition opened to the media and trade on 16 September. The exhibition is open to the public September 19-27. The trade show features 1,102 exhibitors from 39 nations, with more than 900,000 visitors expected.  EPA/MAURITZ ANTIN

Ford, Zotye to invest $756mn for electric cars
Bloomberg

Ford Motor Co and partner Anhui Zotye Automobile Co will invest $756 million to make and sell small electric cars in China as automakers step up investments in low-emission vehicles in the world’s biggest auto market.
Ford and Zotye plan to build a new manufacturing facility in Zhejiang province and the vehicles will be sold under a new Chinese brand, the US automaker said. The joint venture is equally owned by the two companies and the plans require regulatory approval.
Automakers are accelerating investments into electric vehicles to meet stricter emission and fuel-economy rules set to take effect in major markets. China is implementing a cap-and-trade framework next year that will penalise companies that don’t meet fleet-based limits through fines or buying credits.

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