A US-China EV trade war threatens Biden's clean-car agenda
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[May 14, 2024] By
Joseph White, Chris Kirkham and Nora Eckert
DETROIT (Reuters) - The Biden administration's plan to slap heavy new
tariffs on Chinese electric vehicles and batteries would provide
temporary protection for U.S. auto jobs, potentially at the expense of
White House efforts to fight climate change by accelerating U.S. EV
adoption.
Few Chinese-made EVs are currently sold in the United States, so the
immediate impact on consumers of higher EV tariffs would be minimal,
analysts said. The White House also plans to more than triple tariffs on
Chinese EV batteries and battery parts to 25%. Graphite, permanent
magnets used in EV motors and other EV minerals would get new 25% duties
added. These tariffs could affect a broader range of vehicles.
U.S. President Joe Biden's administration issued tailpipe pollution
standards in April designed to drive the share of electric vehicles up
from 8% last year to as much as 56% by 2032. Automakers have warned that
hitting the EV targets will be challenging, in part because different
Biden administration rules deny federal subsidies to EVs that get too
much content from China.
Without access to lower-cost batteries and battery materials made in
China, EVs will be too expensive for mainstream U.S. consumers,
automakers have said.
U.S. automakers exported 155,337 vehicles worth $6.3 billon to China in
2021, according to the most recent U.S. government data. China sent just
64,067 vehicles to the United States in the same year, worth $1.45
billion. Most of the vehicles imported from China were sold under U.S.
brands, led by General Motors' Buick division.
At present, four vehicle lines sold in the United States are made in
China, according to government data: Ford's Lincoln Nautilus SUV, the
Buick Envision SUV, the Polestar 2 and Volvo's S90 sedans. Polestar and
Volvo are affiliates of Chinese automaker Geely.
Chinese retaliatory tariffs that targeted U.S. vehicles could hurt
workers at the BMW factory in Spartanburg, South Carolina, which sends
about 25,000 vehicles to China per year, or the Mercedes-Benz SUV plant
in Alabama that builds electric SUVs sold in the world's largest market.
A clean-technology trade war between the United States and China could
also drive up the costs of EVs, batteries and other EV hardware, keeping
overall EV prices high, industry executives and some analysts said. EVs
wearing U.S. brands, such as the Mustang Mach-E or Tesla Model 3, have
30% to 51% Chinese content, according to U.S. Transportation Department
data.
"From the battery, from the mining, from all the technology integration,
the Chinese supply chain now is the leading supply chain. It's the
best," Stella Li, head of Chinese EV and battery maker BYD's operations
in the Americas, said at the Milken Conference last week. "Why don't you
allow a U.S. company to have the freedom to choose the best supplier?"
Even before Biden's action on Tuesday, electric vehicles had taken a
central position in the U.S. presidential race. EVs are now symbolic in
partisan debates over climate policy and how the U.S. should respond to
China's efforts to dominate critical technologies in the 21st century.
Democrat Biden and his presumptive Republican opponent Donald Trump
agree on very little, except when it comes to using steep tariffs and
other trade barriers to keep Chinese EV makers out of the U.S. market.
Biden and Trump are betting that anti-China trade policies will appeal
to voters in swing states such as Michigan, Wisconsin and Pennsylvania,
which depend on manufacturing jobs.
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The BYD EV Dolphin Mini is displayed as the Chinese electric-vehicle
producer announces the launch of the low-cost EV in Mexico City,
Mexico February 28, 2024. REUTERS/Toya Sarno Jordan
A PAGE FROM CHINA'S PLAYBOOK
Experts are divided over whether stronger tariff protection will
help U.S. automakers in the long run, or work to the benefit of
consumers.
"The tariffs buy important time," said Michael Dunne, a consultant
who has watched the Chinese auto industry for years. "The U.S. is
five to seven years behind China when it comes to electric vehicles
and battery supply chains." China protected its automakers in the
1990s and 2000s, Dunne said. "U.S. political leaders could rightly
say we are just borrowing a page from China's playbook."
Advocates of speeding up the pace of EV adoption to cut U.S. carbon
dioxide emissions warn that reducing pressure from Chinese EV
manufacturers will backfire.
Longer-term, Detroit automakers sheltered from Chinese competition
could replay the experience of the 1970s and 1980s, when import
restrictions on imported Japanese cars gave the domestic automakers
a reprieve from low-priced rivals.
Those trade barriers encouraged Toyota, Honda and Nissan to
transplant their lean production systems to new U.S. factories. The
success of North American-made Japanese vehicles forced General
Motors, Ford and the former Chrysler, now called Stellantis, to shed
thousands of jobs and undergo painful overhauls in the 1990s.
BYD's recent announcement that it plans to build an electric pickup
truck in Mexico transforms a hypothetical threat into a real one for
incumbent U.S. automakers. A Mexican-made EV with sufficient North
American-sourced parts could qualify for tariff-free entry to the
U.S. market.
"If General Motors, Ford and Stellantis don’t have to compete
against foreign companies that make EVs, they won't make them. The
market will go to BYD. And the Americans will lose market share like
they did in the 1970s," said Daniel Becker of the Center for
Biological Diversity, an environmental group that has pushed the
Biden administration for stronger climate policies.
It is not clear how China will respond to the Biden tariff moves.
When Europe threatened to hike tariffs on Chinese-made EVs, China
responded by threatening steep duties on French cognac.
GM President Mark Reuss last week downplayed the risk that Chinese
authorities could make life more difficult for the Detroit
automaker's Chinese operations, which dipped into the red during the
first quarter of this year. Two of GM's biggest brands in China are
U.S. names: Chevrolet and Buick.
"For us in China this has been a great advantage for us to be
partnered so deeply for so many years with our JV partners," SAIC
and Wuling, Reuss said. In China, Reuss said, Buick is seen as both
an American and Chinese brand.
"It's not as clean or as crisp as you might indicate from a more
global, geopolitical standpoint," he said.
(Reporting by Joe White in Detroit; Additional reporting by Chris
Kirkham in Los Angeles and Nora Eckert in Detroit; Editing by Brian
Thevenot and Matthew Lewis)
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