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China eases green rules to promote regular hybrids

China eases green rules to promote regular hybrids

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BEIJING (Reuters) – China re-classified gas-electric hybrid vehicles on Monday so they get more favorable treatment than all-gas or diesel counterparts under new clean car rules, making it easier for automakers to meet environment quotas and offer more choice.

China has some of the world’s strictest rules regarding the production of fossil-fuel vehicles, as it battles unhealthy levels of air pollution in its crowded cities.

Those rules have pushed both domestic and international automakers to spend billions of dollars on the development and production of new energy vehicles (NEVs), such as all-electric, plug-in hybrid and hydrogen fuel cell vehicles. 

Automakers in China are obliged to manufacture NEVs to win “points” to make up for a portion of the negative points they incur when they produce internal combustion engine vehicles.

However, the system has been criticized for offering few incentives for automakers to improve gas-only cars’ efficiency.

The policy published on Monday by China’s Ministry of Industry and Information Technology allows automakers to gradually make more gas-electric hybrids and less of the more costly all-electric vehicles from 2021 through 2023.

Such hybrids would still be considered fossil-fuelled but re-classified as “low fuel consumption passenger vehicles”. Significantly, the number of negative points incurred for making gas-electric hybrids will be less than for gas-only vehicles.

That could see more of those traditionally powered vehicles replaced with gas-electric hybrids, experts and industry officials said, because when automakers produce those hybrids, they would not have as many negative points to make up for.

Experts have said the beneficiaries of such change would include global petrol-electric hybrid leaders Toyota and Honda, as well as Chinese makers Geely Automobile Holdings Ltd, Guangzhou Automobile Group Co Ltd and supplier Hunan Corun New Energy Co Ltd.

China hopes NEVs will account for around a quarter of all vehicles sold in the country by 2025.

(Reporting by Yilei Sun and Norihiko Shirouzu; Editing by Christopher Cushing)

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June 22, 2020 at 02:09PM