China EV Charging Station Market to Reach $10.1 Billion by 2030 Amid Strong EV Adoption
The Asia Pacific Electric Vehicle Market is expected to grow from USD 218.8 billion to USD 404.7 billion by 2030, at a CAGR of 8.1%. The market in Asia Pacific region is led by growing dominance in China, and increasing demand for passenger EVs in South Korea, India, Japan and south east Asian countries such as Thailand, Indonesia, Malaysia and Vietnam. EV sales in China peaked near 50% share of the total vehicle sales in 2024; led by strong collaboration of domestic automakers with battery manufacturers (with lower EV battery costs) and increased platformization, leading to lower cost compared to foreign OEMs. This was however, led by strong sales of PHEVs, which grew by over 80% compared to 2023. Other countries in the region had a slowdown in sales in 2024, but have been showing growth in consumer acceptance lately, and expected to speed up their EV shift post 2025.
BYD (~30-35%) and Tesla (~10-13%) held the
largest market share in the region, led by demand for mid-priced mass market
models. BYDs market growth was led by strong PHEV growth, while Tesla sales
fell due to its slowing demand in China in 2024. Market demand was led by D
segment passenger cars, followed by C segment, and A Segment. While market
demand was distributed largely among BYD models, Tesla sales was led by Model Y
with deep discounts, new variant launch and zero loan period offers.
Download PDF Brochure @ https://www.marketsandmarkets.com/pdfdownloadNew.asp?id=209371461
Some of the other key companies in the Asia
Pacific region include Hyundai Motor Company (South Korea), SAIC Motor (China),
Geely (China), GAC Group (China), Chery (China), Tata Motors (India), Vinfast
(Vietnam) among others. These companies are developing their electric vehicles
by adopting new age production processes such as use of digital factories for
R&D (e.g. Jidu Auto), vehicle platformization (BYD, NIO, XPENG), automated
factories (e.g. Xaomi), and developing best in class features for their future
vehicle lineup. The market is also supported by government initiatives such as
subsidies for manufacturers, discounts on public EV charging, and strong
control on critical minerals of EV components. Manufacturers in the country
need to pay only 15% corporate income tax, compared to 25% tax for most other
industries. It also provides tax exemptions on BEVs. Manufacturers also get
subsidiaries for meeting electrification targets. BYD along with 49 other
manufacturers received USD 6.8 billion in 2023 for production of EVs, as part
of an overall USD 45.3 billion incentives.
EVs in China nowadays come with much better
features, compared to options sold by most western OEMs. Luxury EV
manufacturers such as NIO and XPENG provide features such as best in class
ADAS, digital cockpits, AI enabled auto controls, etc.; features that are yet
to be provided by most European and American luxury vehicle manufacturers; at a
much moderate cost. Some of these companies have also adapted to demand for
mass market EVs, by developing new manufacturing processes (SDV shift with
increased platformization), improving on economies of scale with long term
tie-ups with EV Battery providers, leading to lower EV costs, and higher market
demand in this price sensitive region. Beyond regional presence, many of these
manufacturers have also started showing market dominance in South America,
Middle East and Africa with EVs available at much lower cost compared to many
developed markets. This led to a large consumer shift, and growing automobile
exports for Chinese EV Manufacturers since 2023.
The market in the Asia Pacific region is
heavily dominated by Chinese OEMs, driven by strong domestic demand and growing
market in Southeast Asia. Development of Charging Infrastructure acts as a
catalyst in this market, and is expected to increase impact, with countries providing
incentives to set up charging stations. India for instance, as part of the new
PM E-Drive scheme aims to set up over 200,000 public charging stations by end
of 2025. Similarly, countries such as China, India, provide incentives for
setting up manufacturing units for selling EVs domestically manufactured.
Others provide incentives for buying new EVs, older ICE vehicle scrappage and other
options. OEMs and financial institutions in the region are also providing
attractive new options such as battery leasing to reduce upfront cost of EVs
for consumers. Such developments are expected to drive the EV market in the
Asia Pacific region in coming years.
Request Sample
Pages: https://www.marketsandmarkets.com/requestsampleNew.asp?id=209371461
Comments
Post a Comment