We drove Chinese EVs to see why rival automakers are worried

News

In this article

Trade groups say Chinese electric vehicles pose an “existential threat” to the U.S. auto industry.

China currently makes about one out of every three of the world’s new vehicles, and it has the capacity to make even more, according to research firm Dunne Insights. But faced with a growing preference for hybrids at home and a brutal price war, Chinese automakers want to export more vehicles abroad.

“It’s hard to process that because we don’t see Chinese cars on American roads,” said Dunne Insights founder and CEO Michael Dunne. “Trust me. Go to Australia, to Mexico, to Brazil, to Israel, to South Africa. You’re going to see Chinese cars all over the place.”

Even as China is making progress on its EV goals, the Tesla Model Y became the best-selling vehicle in the world last year, in 2023, according to JATO Dynamics. It also holds the No. 1 sales rank for EVs in the U.S., as well as being one of the nation’s top sellers overall.

So how do Chinese EVs stack up? CNBC Beijing bureau chief Eunice Yoon tested four of them — and the Model Y — to see how they compare to the world’s top seller, and to give some insight into how non-China rivals might compete against them.

Watch the video to learn more.

Products You May Like

Articles You May Like

Elon Musk clarifies the holdup with Tesla Full Self-Driving launch in Europe
Tesla’s market cap sinks below $1 trillion as stock slumps more than 8%
How the German Autobahn ended up without speed limits
Compton, California, just got its first 25 electric school buses
FAA clears SpaceX for another Starship test flight after explosion in January

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.