Cryptopolitan
2026-04-25 15:18:01

Chinese EVs dominate globally but hit a wall in the US

Beijing Auto Show 2026 is exhibiting more than 1400 Chinese cars. The goal is not limited to attracting customers at home but to reach over the shores while potential American buyers remain left out. BYD, China’s biggest EV name, grabbed headlines with a charging system it calls “flash” technology, capable of adding hundreds of kilometers of range within five minutes. To prove the point, the company set up a cage chilled to minus 30 degrees Celsius, showing the cars could charge even in brutal cold. Rival Xpeng went a different route, showing off its own in-house AI chip that drives its vehicles’ self-driving features and, the company says, will also power flying cars it plans to put into mass production by 2027. Other brands brought humanoid robots to the show floor to catch the eye of social media influencers filming live. The flash and spectacle mask a difficult reality back home: Chinese EV brands are stuck in a punishing price war. Most are losing money, and without government subsidies and tax relief, many would not survive. That pressure is pushing companies to load their cars with as much technology as possible to stand out. BYD and Geely have already teamed up with Chinese AI company DeepSeek, while others are working with Huawei and Alibaba. “There’s no longer a distinction between a technology company and a car company,” said Stephen Ma, Nissan Motor China’s chief, speaking to reporters at the show on Friday. Locked out of America but going viral anyway Abroad, the picture looks brighter for Chinese makers. Since the Iran war cut oil flows through the Strait of Hormuz and drove up fuel prices, demand for EVs has soared, as reported by Cryptopolitan previously. Chinese EV exports have jumped 140 percent compared with March last year. BYD executive vice president Stella Li told the BBC the company’s real problem now is keeping up with orders. “Our demand is much higher than what we can supply,” she said. The company has no plans to chase American buyers. “We survive and are successful without the US market today,” Li said. That is largely because the US market is shut to them. The Biden administration put a 100 percent tariff on Chinese EVs in 2024 and later banned Chinese vehicle software and hardware on security grounds. Ford this week denied a Wall Street Journal report that it had discussed a technology-sharing deal with Geely that might bring Chinese car technology to the US market. Yet despite being locked out, Chinese brands are building a strong following in America, largely through TikTok. Influencers with millions of followers have been showing off models that Americans cannot buy, and the videos are pulling in huge audiences. Car influencer Forrest Jones, who has 8.2 million followers, gave viewers a tour of the Zeekr 9X, calling it the “most powerful SUV on the planet.” The vehicle comes with massaging seats, dual touchscreens, a panoramic roof, and rear seats that fully recline with a heated leg rest, a footrest, a cooler, and a removable tablet, all for $83,000. On the more affordable end, influencer Alexandra Kozak raved in a January 2025 video about the BYD Seagull, a small hatchback listed at just $13,000, pointing to its 10-inch rotating touchscreen, wireless charger, and four airbags. “A great price-point that people deserve to have here,” she said. “Not cars starting at $30,000.” A study by Cox Automotive found that 38 percent of Americans said they would seriously consider buying a Chinese car if one were on offer. Australia is a different story Around 80 percent of EVs sold there are made in China, including Teslas built in Shanghai. EV sales rose at least 50 percent in March, with one in every seven cars sold being electric, a national record. BYD alone is expected to deliver 30,000 cars to Australia by June, which could make it the second best-selling brand in the country, behind Toyota, by year’s end, remarkable given it only started selling cars there in 2022. Energy Minister Chris Bowen says the EV shift is already saving 15 million liters of petrol a week and has helped achieve the first drop in transport emissions outside of COVID. Whether the current surge is a lasting shift or a fuel-crisis spike remains to be seen, but analysts are betting on the former. “When somebody switches to an EV, they tend not to switch back,” said Melbourne-based auto analyst Mike Costello. “Clearly the brands most ready to capitalise on that are the Chinese, because they’ve got the most products.” Don’t just read crypto news. Understand it. Subscribe to our newsletter. It's free .

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