BYD surges past Honda and Nissan’s sales for the first time, targets Ford with low-cost EVs
Peter Johnson | Aug 23 2024 electrek.co
https://electrek.co/2024/08/23/byd-tops-honda-first-time-targets-fo...
China’s leading EV maker, BYD, sold more vehicles than Honda and Nissan for the first time in the second quarter. BYD is now the world’s seventh-largest automaker. With low-cost EVs hitting key global markets, BYD is quickly catching up to Ford.
Affordable EVs driving demand
According to MarkLines (via Nikkei), BYD’s new vehicle sales climbed 40% between April and June to 980,000. The growth was enough to overtake Japan’s Honda and Nissan for the first time to become the seventh-largest automaker globally.
A big part of BYD’s surging sales numbers is its incredibly affordable electric cars. BYD continues slashing prices while releasing lower-cost EV models.
Its cheapest EV, the Seagull, starts at just $9,700 (69,800 yuan) in China. Meanwhile, much of BYD’s success this year is thanks to growing overseas sales.
BYD sold 105,000 vehicles outside of China, roughly tripling from last year. After launching in key markets like Mexico, Brazil, Japan, Europe, Thailand, and other Southeast Asian countries, BYD is already a leading EV brand.
Although global auto leaders like Volkswagen and Toyota’s sales numbers fell in Q2, BYD continued to see more demand.
Toyota is the only Japanese automaker that sold more vehicles than BYD in Q2, a stark contrast from past years.
Will BYD top Ford in vehicle sales?
BYD’s growing global presence is symbolic of the auto industry’s shift to electric. Although China is leading the transition, many countries are setting aggressive EV goals as they look toward a cleaner, more sustainable future.
While BYD’s sales jumped 35% in China in June, Honda and many foreign rivals had double-digit sales declines. And it’s not only in China. Honda plans to halve capacity in Thailand, where BYD is already emerging as a market leader.
BYD is also planning to open several overseas plants as it expands its global manufacturing footprint.
It opened its first in Thailand last month, with Hungary, Brazil, Turkey, Mexico, and Pakistan plants in the works.
After topping Honda and Nissan in Q2, BYD is quickly closing in on other legacy automakers, including Ford and America’s “Big Three.”
Ford’s wholesales reached 1.14 million in the second quarter, a slight increase from the 1.12 million in Q2 2023.
The American automaker announced several new EV delays this week, including pushing back its next-gen electric pickup until the second half of 2027, two years later than expected.
Ford also canceled plans for its three-row electric SUV to focus on hybrids, opening the door for rivals like Kia and Volvo to take over the segment. The company said it will give a more complete update on its EV strategy next year.
Meanwhile, BYD plans to expand into Ford’s territory by selling vehicles in Canada. It’s also closing in on a plant in Mexico that will produce 150,000 vehicles in its first stage.
Eventually, the plant will produce 400,000 to 500,000 cars, BYD’s Mexico boss told Reuters this week.
Electrek’s Take
After Japanese automakers like Honda and Nissan were some of the slowest to shift to electric, they are now feeling the heat in several key markets.
Despite many headlines promoting an “EV slowdown,” sales are still climbing while gas-powered vehicles fall out of favor.
Automakers that have failed to keep up with the transition are losing market share, while EV leaders like BYD and Tesla have emerged as leading global auto brands.
BYD is now the seventh-largest automaker globally, up from tenth last year. Can it overtake Ford?
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The Irony is rich here. China is not only making EVs, but Chinese citizens are buying and driving them. And where does the electricity come from to charge those EVs. Mostly coal. China has a very aggressive expansion of coal fired power plants over the past few years.
So, let’s all shift from fossil fuel powered cars to EVs that use electricity generated by - mostly fossil fuels. Hey, natural gas is cleaner than crude oil, and NG royalties filter into my pocket. But, still, the growth of EV use in China is ironic.
Those cheap Chinese EVs were built with huge government subsidies as were the batteries that make them so good and cheap. China chose to invest government dollars in a handful of nascent technologies that are global imperatives. Now China has a big problem: too much manufacturing capacity and a depressed domestic market. So now the push is on to export not just EVs but a number of manufactured goods at below market prices putting pressure not only on US automakers but on first world manufacturers around the globe. In an attempt to dodge import tariffs, China is setting up EV plants in a number of countries including Mexico. You can be sure that Chinese EVs manufactured in Mexico are intended for the American market.
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