Earlier, Miao Wei, China's minister for industry and information
technology (MIIT), told a forum that the country would not cut
subsidies for new energy vehicles (NEV) again in July, an
approach which was cheered by vehicle makers.
The government-backed Beijing News said an MIIT representative,
in response to Miao's statement, said that "this year's NEV
subsidy policy will remain relatively stable and there will not
be significant cuts".
Beijing has been slowly rolling back a generous 5-year subsidy
programme for NEVs, which began in 2016, saying it plans to
phase out subsidies after 2020, amid criticism that some firms
have become overly reliant on the funds.
China's monthly NEV sales dropped for the first time in two
years in July as the subsidy cuts reached a new level, and have
continued falling since.
"There was a subsidy cut on July 1 last year and everyone has
been concerned about whether we will see more cuts this year,"
Miao told the EV100 annual gathering of senior auto industry
executives in Beijing.
"Today I can tell everyone, we will not cut it in July this
year."
Miao's speech was the "best news", He Xiaopeng, chief executive
of EV startup XPeng Motors, told Reuters, adding that policy
stability was crucial to the industry.
Miao also said NEV sales hit 163,000 units in December and
full-year sales stood at 1.2 million NEVs, a drop from 1.3
million in 2018.
The China Association of Automobile Manufacturers will announce
2019 full-year sales figures on Monday. Last month, it said that
NEV sales from January to November hit 1.04 million.
Automakers who stand to benefit include Tesla <TSLA.O>, which
started making deliveries from its $2-billion Shanghai plant
this month and secured NEV subsidies in December, Warren
Buffett-backed Chinese electric car maker BYD <002594.SZ> as
well as aspiring Tesla-challenger Nio Inc <NIO.N>.
(Reporting by Yilei Sun in Beijing and Brenda Goh in Shanghai;
Editing by Jacqueline Wong, Clarence Fernandez and xxx)
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