Diamond Member Pelican Press 0 Posted September 26, 2024 Diamond Member Share Posted September 26, 2024 This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up Analysis-Stellantis CEO follows ******** route to avoid EV tariff ‘trap’ By Nick Carey, Nora Eckert and Joseph White LONDON/DETROIT (Reuters) – Stellantis wants to adopt the low-cost mindset of ******** EV makers despite the ********* and U.S. tariffs CEO Carlos Tavares lambasts as anticompetitive, but the world’s No. 4 automaker must navigate trade barriers on both sides of the Atlantic if it wants to succeed. Tavares calls tariffs a “trap,” arguing they will hurt legacy automakers by shielding them from the reality that ******** rivals make electric vehicles for about a third less. The best way to compete is instead to “try to be ******** ourselves,” Tavares said at a Reuters Events conference in Munich in May. That belief led Stellantis to purchase a 21% stake in China EV maker Leapmotor last October, creating a ****** venture giving Stellantis access to Leapmotor technology and exclusive rights to produce its EVs outside of China. The challenges faced by Stellantis in the EU and the U.S. are no different than those confronting all automakers as they seek to compete with the ******** globally. However, Stellantis and a handful of others have taken it a step further, establishing partnerships with ******** automakers in order to stay competitive. Stellantis is making Leapmotor EVs at its Tychy plant in Poland alongside models from better-known brands Fiat, Jeep and Alfa Romeo. Tavares says Stellantis could make Leapmotor EVs in North America. But applying the same strategy in Europe and the U.S. is difficult because the regions have sharply different approaches to ******** EVs and the underlying technology. ******** EVs are already on ***** in Europe; and factories to make more are being built – with subsidies from individual countries competing for plants. ********* automakers are embracing ******** technology. Volkswagen has bought a stake in China’s Xpeng to jointly develop cheaper EVs for the ******** market. Many auto experts see this as a blueprint for future partnerships. “We believe many of our competitors will turn to ******** companies … to use their platform globally,” Ford CEO Jim Farley said in July, adding the U.S. automaker will develop its own core EV technology instead. Such partnerships are far more challenging in the ******* States. The Biden administration has slapped a 100% tariff on ********-made EVs, championed U.S. production through the $430 billion Inflation Reduction Act and targeted ******** car components. The U.S government now proposes barring ******** software and hardware from vehicles on ********* roads, which could be its most powerful ******* yet to block ******** EVs. Story continues Stellantis could theoretically produce Leapmotor EVs at U.S. plants, but with non-******** parts and U.S. wages any savings could be minimal. The real problem for Stellantis would be political. For instance, U.S. *********** Senator Marco Rubio and others have fiercely criticized a planned Ford battery plant in Michigan using technology licensed from ******** company CATL. Stellantis’ contrasting U.S. and ********* options highlight differences in trade strategies on both sides of the Atlantic. Protectionist moves have divided automakers and executives, with some, like Tavares, rejecting the need for tariffs, especially ******* automakers reliant on China for profits. BMW CEO Oliver Zipse argues that as China dominates EV raw materials and components, a trade war would hurt Europe. “There is no Green Deal in Europe without resources from China,” Zipse said in May. But some U.S. automakers favor tariffs. Ford’s Farley says tariffs level the playing field, giving U.S. automakers a short window to match ******** rivals’ ability to make cheaper EVs. Industry observers say regardless of tariffs, China’s EV industry will become a global powerhouse. ‘GIVE THEM TIME’ U.S. executives said two ********* Commission reports released this year – detailing ******** government assistance including direct EV purchase subsidies, cheap corporate loans, cheap electricity, and cheap or even free land – prove protection is needed. ******** companies dominate raw materials from rare earths to graphite, undercutting Western rivals on price. In June, the U.S. government reinstated a 25% tariff on ******** artificial and natural graphite. “As long as the market stays unbalanced … tariffs should stay in place,” said Chris Burns, CEO of battery materials company Novonix, which has received $203 million in U.S. grants and tax credits to scale up synthetic graphite anode production at a Tennessee plant. Detroit’s automakers also need better EV models to compete, said Tim Piechowski, portfolio manager at ACR Alpine Capital Research, a General Motors investor. “This (tariffs) does give them time,” Piechowski said. ‘CARROT AND STICK’ The EU has proposed tariffs of up to 35.3%, but cannot shut out ******** automakers because the 27-country bloc has a common set of rules for members and outsiders to play by. “The aim is to remain open to competition from China, but on fair terms,” a ********* Commission spokesperson said. Andy Palmer, former COO of Nissan and currently chairman of Slovak battery maker InoBat, part-owned by China’s Gotion High-tech, said the EU must rely on a “combination of carrot and stick to bring the ******** in, so at least they’re making locally.” Stellantis’ Tavares says tariffs hurt exports because protected automakers are under no pressure to lower prices. “When you get used to protection, it’s very difficult to get rid of,” Tavares told Reuters in May. Stellantis is instead leaning on cheaper models like its upcoming Citroen e-C3, which will start at 20,000 euros ($21,342), and its Leapmotor EVs to compete. A number of automakers have backpedaled on electrification targets, but Stellantis said its targets of 100% EV sales in Europe and 50% in the U.S. by 2030 remain in place. Moshiel Biton, CEO of ******** battery materials company Addionics, which plans a $400 million U.S. factory for cathode materials, said legacy automakers must develop better EVs to compete instead of simply embracing ******** technology. “If they just try to do copy and paste, they can’t compete with the ******** on cost,” Biton said. “Innovation is mandatory or they face a ***** end.” (Reporting By Nick Carey in London and Nora Eckert and Joseph White in Detroit; Editing by Ben Klayman and Matthew Lewis) This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up #AnalysisStellantis #CEO #******** #route #avoid #tariff #trap This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up Link to comment https://hopzone.eu/forums/topic/135438-analysis-stellantis-ceo-follows-chinese-route-to-avoid-ev-tariff-%E2%80%98trap%E2%80%99/ Share on other sites More sharing options...
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