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Cars are being assembled at the NIO Second Advanced Manufacturing Base in Hefei, China’s Anhui Province on October 11, 2023. Photo: Xinhua

China’s EV makers face rising EU demands on climate disclosures, sustainability compliance, eroding export edge: expert

  • EU regulations and laws aimed at achieving its 2050 net zero ambition have major implications for Chinese firms, says TUV Rheinland technical manager
  • Some EU measures ‘can be considered a kind of protectionism’, he says
Chinese electric vehicle (EV) makers face a mounting burden from disclosures relating to carbon emissions and other sustainability and compliance issues in the European Union, their largest export market, according to a sector expert.

Rising environmental requirements will erode some of the competitive advantage of Chinese EVs and components, given their high carbon footprint from long distance transport, said Ray Niu, customised services senior technical manager at testing, inspection and certification provider TUV Rheinland in China.

“The EU has launched a series of regulations and laws in recent years as part of efforts to achieve its 2050 net zero carbon ambition, which have major implications for Chinese firms,” he told the Post.

“Such regulations not only brought additional sustainability requirements for market entry into the private sector, they are also manifested in the EU’s public-sector procurement policies. Some can be considered a kind of protectionism.”

Cars wait to be loaded onto a ship for export at the port in Yantai, in China’s Shandong province, on January 2, 2024. Photo: AFP

For example, he said, the submission of an environmental product declaration (EPD) has been added as a requirement in the tendering of public electric buses, which has affected Chinese suppliers like Shenzhen-based BYD, the world’s largest EV maker.

The EPD provides information about a product’s environmental impact throughout its life cycle, from raw materials production to post-consumption disposal.

For EVs, the EDP covers low-carbon product design, energy management system optimisation and energy efficiency improvement.

Chinese carmakers are expected to sell 5 million vehicles overseas this year, according to Swiss bank UBS, amid anti-subsidy investigations launched by the European Commission. Last year, Chinese manufacturers exported 5.22 million units – a 57.4 per cent jump year on year – of which 34 per cent were passenger EVs.

TUV Rheinland recently conducted a life cycle assessment (LCA) and an international EPD assessment for two models of pure electric buses produced by BYD Auto Industry, a unit of BYD.

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The EU regulations have pressured global car brands to accelerate implementation of their own climate mitigation measures and to pass on more stringent emissions-reduction requirements to their global supply chain partners, Niu said.

For the EV sector, batteries are expected to be the first key component where LCA requirements will be enforced, with detailed technical carbon footprint calculation methodologies due to be released as soon as this month, he noted.

In August, the EU passed a new law to ensure that batteries have a low carbon footprint, use minimal harmful substances, need less raw materials from outside the region, and are collected, reused and recycled to a high degree in Europe.

Starting from next year, the regulation will gradually introduce declaration requirements, performance classes and limits on the carbon footprint of EVs, e-bikes and scooters, as well as rechargeable industrial batteries.

The declarations encompass aspects such as harmful materials, carbon emissions, renewable content, useful lifespan, safety, supply chain sustainability due diligence and materials recycling and reuse.

China touts global EV presence to keep trade curbs from defusing industry boom

In France the government in October introduced a new factor for determining whether EVs sold in the nation will qualify for state subsidies.

An “environmental score” for each model was given based on the specification submitted to the authorities. The assessment encompasses the whole production cycle, factoring in carbon emissions from materials and the energy used to build them and transport them.

“Based on our analysis, for Chinese EV companies exporting to the EU, aluminium parts are the biggest contributor to their products’ environmental scores, followed by long-distance sea transportation and then steel parts,” Niu said.

For steel and aluminium materials, the main ways to reduce carbon footprint are to use more renewable energy for production, change to less carbon-intensive production methods and use more recycled metals, he said.

EV makers can also try to replace more metal components with plastic ones to reduce the weight of their products, hence reducing transport emissions.

China’s Leapmotor joins BYD, Geely in targeting Europe with EV exports

On Chinese EV makers’ readiness to meet the EU requirements, Niu said top-tier Chinese EV makers are quite well prepared, while many second-tier ones are only at the early stage of the journey.

“The more established and better prepared companies have been studying the regulations and setting up their own digital data collection and calculation platforms to meet the requirements,” he said.

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