China Auto Thread

China's Auto Exports Surge 63% to 4.06 Million Units in Jan-May, NEV Share Expands to 45%

2026-07-03 08:15 (GMT+8)

China's automobile exports reached 4.059 million units in the first five months of 2026, surging 63% year-on-year, with new energy vehicles (NEVs) accounting for approximately 45% of the total, according to data from the China Association of Automobile Manufacturers (CAAM).

Chery led among manufacturers, followed by BYD. Meanwhile, China's domestic market remains sluggish, with industry profit margins falling to around 3%.

Overseas markets offer selling prices 40-60% higher than domestic levels and superior profitability, making them increasingly attractive. BYD will launch the "RACCO" kei EV in Japan in July, while Chery plans to enter the Japanese market next year under the "EMTA" brand.

The export offensive by Chinese automakers and their full-scale entry into Japan are poised to dramatically reshape the competitive landscape of the global auto industry.

 

China is setting the auto industry's 'future standards': Nissan CEO on EVs & the US market



Nissan (NSANY) CEO, Ivan Espinosa, chats with Yahoo Finance Senior Autos Reporter Pras Subramanian and Asking for a Trend host Josh Lipton about how China is driving trends in the autos industry, and how the market differs in the US.

 

China car exports jump 73% in May as high fuel prices raise interest in EVs

By Chan Ho-Him
July 05, 2026 at 10:10 am CDT

An aerial view of new cars awaiting export to oversea markets is seen at a port in Shanghai.

An aerial view of new cars awaiting export to oversea markets is seen at a port in Shanghai. (AP photo/Chinatopix/AP Photo/undefined)


HONG KONG (AP) — China’s passenger car exports jumped 73% year-on-year in May to around 809,000 vehicles, an industry group reported June 10, as higher gasoline and diesel prices due to the war in Iran raised interest in electric vehicles.

That’s up from about 796,000 passenger cars exported in April, data from the China Association of Automobile Manufacturers showed.

 

China’s May auto sales: ICE models excluded from top 10 and top 5 best-sellers are pure-electric​


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#2



Tesla Model Y at #2 and Model 3 at #7....multiple BYD models have slipped off the charts...only one now remains. Here is the 2025 total sales...notice how BYD had 5 out of the 10 top selling models. Now just one.

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From factory to tech frontier: China becomes legacy automakers' innovation engine​

By Reuters
July 8, 20267:04 AM GMT+8Updated 1 hour ago
  • GM to export first China-developed Buick, use Xiao Yao platform in next Cadillac Optiq , source says
  • Legacy automakers tap China R&D expertise to stay competitive
  • China-built AUDI E5 outsells locally adapted Mercedes CLA in China
  • Shift toward China-led innovation also sparks some concerns
SHANGHAI, July 8 (Reuters) - In May, General Motors marked a rare milestone for a foreign automaker in China, selling more than 10,000 of its new Buick Electra E7 in the first month.

While the nameplate is all-American, everything else about the car is Chinese — it was developed entirely at the technical centre GM runs with local partner SAIC.

GM plans to export the car to South Korea and use its China-built ‌platform in the next iteration of the Cadillac Optiq, said a person with direct knowledge of the plans, which are reported here for the first time.

For years, global automakers used China as a low-cost manufacturing base to churn out cars developed at headquarters. Now, GM, Volkswagen and Renault are handing development to Chinese engineers, leveraging the country's growing advantage in critical technology such as electric powertrains and advanced software.

China teams are getting more autonomy, too. As a result, headquarters no longer call all the shots, said Zhu Yulong, a former GM engineer in China and now an independent auto analyst.

With the Electra, "the product definition and technical roadmap are for the first time firmly in the hands of the China team," Zhu said.

A GM China spokesperson declined to comment on potential exports or future market plans but said it was focused on developing vehicles and technologies that resonate with customers in China and elsewhere.

While China-developed technology was once ⁠meant only for the local market, it is increasingly being adapted to rollout globally, auto executives and analysts said.

The new Buick uses the Xiao Yao platform developed by engineers at SAIC-GM's Pan Asia Technical Automotive Centre (PATAC) in Shanghai, which has some 3,000 staff, according to SAIC-GM.

Xiao Yao — the name comes from a Daoist term meaning "freedom from burdens" — features a 900-volt supercharging system and a plug-in hybrid powertrain and delivers what SAIC-GM said is market-leading fuel efficiency.

Its features aren't available on Detroit-developed GM models.

Using Xiao Yao in the new Optiq would replace the Detroit-developed Ultium platform used in previous Optiq models, according to the person, who spoke on condition of anonymity.

While the Xiao Yao-based Electra has been a hit for GM in China, models built on the Ultium saw sluggish sales.
 
Huawei must feel so dumb for quitting their car making venture half-way...

Xiaomi mobile studio apartment (aka full sized SUV):

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China’s passenger car exports are up 80% in June as EV demand grows

China has reported its exports of passenger cars surged 80% in June from a year earlier, while domestic sales sank 26%, according to an industry group

July 9, 2026, 6:26 PM

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China’s passenger car exports surged 80% in June from a year earlier, mainly due to strong demand for electric vehicles, though domestic sales fell 26%.

In the first half of this year, Chinese passenger vehicle exports jumped 72% to more than 4.4 million, according to the China Association of Automobile Manufacturers.

Sales inside China were still larger, at nearly 8.3 million for January-June and around 1.5 million passenger cars in the month of June.

China exported about 905,000 passenger cars last month, up from 809,000 in May.

China’s domestic car market has been under pressure as the overcrowded market is plagued by fierce price wars. A prolonged slump in the property market has hurt household budgets, hitting demand. Cutbacks in government support for purchases of EVs have also taken a toll.

Consultancy AlixPartners forecast that sales of light vehicles including passenger cars in China will likely fall 10%, partly because potential buyers could be holding off on purchases as they wait for prices to fall further.

Chinese automakers like BYD have been expanding into overseas markets and setting up factories in key markets. That can help improve their profitability, but it's added to friction with trading partners.

China’s passenger car exports could grow by 30% to 50% for the whole of 2026 from a year ago, said Stephen Chan, an analyst at S&P Global Ratings.

AlixPartners recently forecast Chinese exports for 2026 could rise to about 10 million vehicles this year, up from around 7 million in 2025.

Chinese car brands are also making inroads in Canada after it approved an annual import quota of 49,000 EVs from China at a low tax rate. Auto analysts are watching to see if that might pave the way for exports to the U.S. market, where hefty tariffs have effectively blocked Chinese EV exports.

Last month, Sweden-headquartered EV maker Polestar, which is controlled by Chinese auto group Geely, said the U.S. Commerce Department has banned it from selling vehicles in the U.S. from the 2027 model year.

Going global has “become a necessity” for automakers in China, Wei Haigang, president of automaker GAC International, said at an autos expo in Hong Kong in June. “In China’s highly competitive environment, companies that don’t venture overseas will face immense difficulties in surviving.”

 
China's Auto Exports Crush Global Rivals | World Business Watch
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Huawei must feel so dumb for quitting their car making venture half-way...

Xiaomi mobile studio apartment (aka full sized SUV):

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Even made it to a Chinese news outlet. Huawei must be kicking themselves for abandoning their desire to make cars early on. Only those that are tough got going when the going got tough... (And those that stuck to it now have fun designing a SUV that transforms into a mobile studio apartment)

Them focusing only on the cockpit solution to sell cars other companies make is like trying to invite a foreigner to play on the national team, a total shame on the hosting country.

 
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Even made it to a Chinese news outlet. Huawei must be kicking themselves for abandoning their desire to make cars early on. Only those that are tough got going when the going got tough... (And those that stuck to it now have fun designing a SUV that transforms into a mobile studio apartment)

Them focusing only on the cockpit solution to sell cars other companies make is like trying to invite a foreigner to play on the national team, a total shame on the hosting country.

IMO part of early wide adoption of Xiaomi cars is their attention to details.

When I bought my Xiaomi 1080p projector off Aliexpress, the seller claimed they would open the package and remove the OEM (remote control) alkaline batteries before shipping. They never did, so I was surprised to receive an unopened factory box. I always thought Xiaomi only provided batteries to last a few weeks for you to turn on the projector and tweak a few settings. Been on the same batteries for almost three years now. Glad Xiaomi didn't even cheap out on the disposable remote control batteries.

This the kind of attention to details that's fully deserved of selling cars like hot cakes!
 

China exports over half a million plug-in cars for first time in June

The Chinese market for New Energy Vehicles (NEV) reached a new record in June. Almost six out of ten newly sold vehicles had an alternative drive system. At the same time, auto exports exceeded the half-million mark for NEVs in a single month for the first time.

In June, New Energy Vehicles in China reached a record share of 58.5 per cent of new car sales

By Jasmin Apitzsch-Krause
10.07.2026 - 09:24

According to data from the Chinese Manufacturers’ Association (CAAM), 58.5% of all new car sales in June were battery-electric vehicles (BEVs), plug-in hybrids (PHEVs), and fuel cell vehicles. In China, these alternative drivetrains are generally grouped under the term New Energy Vehicles (NEVs). With this 58.5% share, NEVs reached a new record high in Chinese wholesale sales for the third consecutive month.

As CNEVPost reports, a total of 1.643 million NEVs were sold in June. This represents a 23.6% increase compared to the same month last year and a 9.8% rise compared to May. Production reached 1.598 million vehicles, marking a 26% year-on-year increase. Focusing solely on BEV sales, these rose by 33% in June to 1.142 million units. Plug-in hybrids also saw growth, with 500,000 vehicles sold, an increase of 6.5%.

Battery-electric vehicles continue to dominate China’s NEV market. In the first half of the year, China sold 7.45 million NEVs, a 7.3% increase compared to the same period last year. The NEV share of all new car sales from January to June stood at 49.6%, nearly on par with vehicles powered by conventional drivetrains.

In contrast, the overall passenger car market showed more modest growth. A total of 2.81 million vehicles were sold in June. While this represents a 6.9% increase from the previous month, sales declined by 3.2% compared to June 2025. The decline is due to weak domestic demand, as the government is phasing out certain purchase incentives and subsidies. The market is now primarily supported by a booming export business: in June, vehicle exports surpassed the one-million mark for the first time, reaching 1.037 million units—a 75.1% year-on-year increase.

Exports of NEVs saw particularly dynamic growth. With 523,000 units, China exceeded the half-million mark for NEV exports in a single month for the first time. This represents a 1.6-fold increase compared to the same month last year. Of these, 309,000 were battery-electric models, and 214,000 were plug-in hybrids. The latter grew by 90%, once again outpacing BEV export growth. In the half-year comparison, export growth is also significant: China exported a total of 5.1 million vehicles (+65.3%) from January to June, including 2.36 million NEVs. NEV exports more than doubled compared to the same period last year.

The latest sales figures align with the Chinese government’s long-term electrification strategy. Earlier this week, Beijing published its new action plan as part of its 15th Five-Year Plan. Here, vehicles with alternative drivetrains are to account for around 30% of the total vehicle fleet by 2030. To achieve this goal, the current NEV fleet would need to more than double within the next five years. In parallel, the government plans to further expand charging, battery-swapping, and hydrogen infrastructure, as well as accelerating the electrification of commercial vehicle traffic. While direct purchase incentives are being phased out, China is increasingly focusing on long-term expansion targets for vehicle fleets, infrastructure, and industry.

 
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When demand is propped up by subsidies rather than genuine consumer demand, the cracks are bound to show sooner or later.

China car sales fall for ninth consecutive month​

 
When demand is propped up by subsidies rather than genuine consumer demand, the cracks are bound to show sooner or later.

China car sales fall for ninth consecutive month​

lol, welcome sour grape Indians. post more please.
 

Weichai certifies world’s first China VI hydrogen engine

With 90% component overlap with diesel, the WP15 lowers the infrastructure and fleet adoption barriers for hydrogen trucking

July 10, 2026

Weichai Power has certified the world’s first heavy-duty hydrogen internal combustion engine to China’s China VI emission standard, following testing at a state-certified automotive test centre in Tianjin on 3 July 2026. The WP15 was evaluated across a full operating cycle including cold start, high-speed full-load and transient variable load conditions.

The WP15 adopts a hydrogen direct-injection, spark-ignited architecture with a 14.6-litre displacement, producing 447 kW (600 horsepower) and 2,800 N•m of torque. Maximum brake thermal efficiency reaches 46.8%. Weichai says the combination delivers strong power output and low fuel consumption while eliminating direct carbon emissions across the engine’s full operating range.

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More than 90% of components are shared with conventional diesel platforms, reducing production, retrofit and maintenance costs. The engine tolerates lower hydrogen purity grades than competing designs, which Weichai says will lower end-user fuel costs and ease the commercial transition from fossil fuels in heavy transport.

Target applications include long-haul trucks, mining dump trucks, port equipment, steel mill vehicles and large hydrogen power generators. The architecture is designed to replicate the load capacity and range of diesel equivalents in sectors where battery-electric solutions face weight and range constraints.

Weichai Power, listed in Hong Kong, has invested in hydrogen powertrain development for over two decades and operates an integrated system covering fundamental research, product engineering, testing and commercial deployment. The firm says mass production will be accelerated following the certification, with active support for China’s national hydrogen demonstration programmes forming a stated near-term priority.

 

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