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subject: Evaluation Of Green Car Subsidies Has Already Begun In Some Pilot Areas [print this page]


The government has rolled out the long-awaited incentive program for fuel-efficient vehicles on trial basis in five cities. The response from industry observers has been cautiously optimistic due to the small size of the program, which does not encompass Beijing, the city with the greatest vehicle ownership per capita.

The five cities selected for the pilot project are the home for major automobile assembly plants, including Shanghai, Shenzhen, Hangzhou, Changchun and Hefei. Effective June 1, buyers will get a 60,000 yuan (8,784) incentive for a wholly-electric car, or 50,000 yuan for a plug-in hybrid car, according to a Ministry of Finance statement.

But the incentives will not go to car buyers but to automakers directly, who will lower the actual purchase price on relevant models accordingly. Doing so is apparently easier, said Jia Xinguang, an independent consultant in the auto industry, although there may be problems in transparency and also in the supervision of how the policy is being carried out.

Chinese automaker BYD's spokesman Xu An told that the incentive program can cover as much as one-third of the price of the company's F3MD, a hybrid passenger vehicle, which sells for between 100,000 yuan and 130,000 yuan. News of the government's incentive program sent shares of lithium battery makers up in the domestic stock market, with analysts predicting that their revenues would see a rapid rise between 2011 and 2015.

The five-city pilot project will have a limited impact on carmakers for now. BYD Vice-President Wang Jianjun agreed that the subsidy program would have a limited influence while there are also many other factors affecting the car market. For example, it will take time for consumers to get familiar with green vehicles and businesses will need time to develop related services such as roadside recharging stations.

One remaining problem to affect the spread of green cars is that, even with the subsidy, most green cars will be selling for 200,000 yuan per unit (more than $29,000), and are still more expensive than the gas-powered models.

Previously, the central government announced it would invest up to 10 billion yuan in the development of new energy vehicles, so that by 2015, there will be between 500,000 to 1 million green cars on Chinese roads. Although China is keen on new energy vehicles, especially electric cars, it doesn't mean it's the time for mass sales. The fact is that new energy vehicles are still in the trial stage, that's the major reason why subsidy program is only carried out in five cities.

Copyright (c) 2010 Steven Jiang

by: Steven Jiang




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