Automakers lured by government policies tilt
the global balance towards electric vehicles
BANGKOK, Aug. 8, 2024
/PRNewswire/ -- BYD and BMW are two very different auto
companies.
BYD is the Chinese upstart that is tussling with Tesla for the
title of world's leading manufacturer of new energy vehicles. BMW
is the venerable 108-year-old German company that ranks as the
global top selling luxury car brand.
Yet despite their dissimilar pedigrees and target markets, BYD
and BMW have made one identical business decision: To make
Thailand a base to manufacture
electric vehicles and the increasingly sophisticated batteries that
power them.
They are far from alone. Thai government tax breaks, subsidies
and other incentives are transforming Southeast Asia's second largest economy into a
global hub not only for the production of battery electric vehicles
(BEVs) but also the hybrid technologies that are supporting the
zero-emission transition.
And even as BYD staged the grand opening on July 4, 2024 of its 32
billion baht (about $900
million) state-of-the-art factory at Rayong in Thailand's high-tech Eastern Economic
Corridor, six other major Chinese BEV manufacturers -- Great Wall
Motor, Hozon New Energy Automobile, SAIC Motor, Chongqing Changan
Automobile, GAC Aion and Chery Automobile -- were already either
operating or building their own factories nearby.
In addition to this Chinese investment surge, Japan's Isuzu Motors in March used the Bangkok
International Motor Show in March
2024 to unveil the company's first BEV – a version of the
best-selling D-Max one-ton pickup truck – which it said would be
built in Thailand and exported to
select European markets, such as Norway, starting in 2025. Isuzu, which boasts
50 percent of the Thai pickup market, has filed last year with the
Thailand Board of Investment (BOI)
a plan to increase its investment in Thailand by 32 billion
baht.
Isuzu's compatriots, Toyota and Honda, are also embracing the
Kingdom as a place to advance their own clean energy ambitions by
initially focusing on hybrids while taking tentative steps towards
EV production.
So, too, is Korea's Hyundai Motor Company. Its unit, Hyundai
Mobility Manufacturing (Thailand)
Co., Ltd. received approval from the BOI in August 2024 to invest 1
billion baht to start in 2026 the local assembly of BEVs and
the batteries that power them.
Of the major European investors, Mercedes-Benz has been
assembling electric cars and batteries in Thailand since 2022. BMW, which leads the
premium market segment and has been building cars in Thailand since 2000, will launch its first
locally made EVs in the second half of 2025. In March 2024, it broke ground on a 42 million euro fifth generation high voltage
battery plant in Rayong.
That same month, Chinese battery maker SVOLT Energy Technology,
in partnership with Thai energy company Banpu Next, began producing
EV battery packs in Thailand –
further evidence that the kingdom is not only building vehicles,
but also creating a localized supply chain to support the sector's
growth.
Then in May, Changan announced partnerships with Thailand parts manufacturers including AAPICO
Hitech PCL and Thai Summit Group as part of a total procurement
plan worth 20 million baht (about
$540 million) to produce Changan EVs
locally from the start of 2025.
In total, 18 clean energy automakers have invested $2.2 billion in the Kingdom, a figure the BOI
believes could soar by 10-fold by 2027.
"I follow these topics very deeply, but even I was surprised at
how the market has developed here in the past year," Eric Ruge, Managing Director of BMW
Manufacturing (Thailand) Co. Ltd.,
said in an interview. "Customers are marching in the direction of
battery electric vehicles."
Thailand has long been a
successful player in the conventional internal combustion engine
(ICE) auto industry, ranking 10th in the world and number one in
Southeast Asia as a manufacturer
in 2023.
Now government policies offering subsidies, tax breaks and other
incentives to manufacturers and consumers have catapulted it
towards the top of the EV rankings, ahead of the U.S. and chasing
market leader China.
Even when enthusiasm for BEV began to falter in other countries,
Thailand this year offered "an
unwavering commitment" to maintain its consistent support.
That consistency has not only led to a surge in BEV sales
locally but also contributed towards what analysts at Bloomberg
Green, a unit of the New
York-based financial news service that focuses on the
business, science and technology of climate change, say will be a
tipping point for mass adoption of zero-emission vehicles.
The tipping point, the analysts estimate, is a 5% market share –
the level at which new technologies such as smart watches typically
start to take the world by storm. So far 31 countries have met that
figure for EV sales with Thailand
being one that surpassed it "in blazing fashion," they noted.
In 2023, EV sales in Thailand
soared by almost eight-fold to 76,000 – accounting for 12 percent
of all vehicles sold. In the first quarter of 2024, the EV market
share rose to 14 percent. "Thailand emerged as Southeast Asia's EV pioneer," Bloomberg Green
reported.
And that is just the start. Before this year, almost all EVs
sold in Thailand were imported –
mostly from China. Now with the
opening of so many local production facilities, the annual sales
figure for 2024 is set to double again to 150,000 – a 20 percent
market share of all vehicles produced, the Electric Vehicle
Association of Thailand has
forecast.
The country's next big target is a so-called "30@30" strategy
that aims for 30% of vehicles manufactured by 2030 to be EVs. These
include not only private cars, but also trucks and buses.
Given that more than half of Thailand's 2.5 million vehicle manufacturing
capacity will be exported, that would make the Kingdom an even more
important global contributor to clean energy vehicle
production.
"Thailand aims to become a
major EV manufacturing hub for domestic and export markets," the
International Energy Agency, a Paris-based intergovernmental organization
comprising countries that account for 80% of global energy
consumption, said in its 2024 Global EV Outlook. "New subsidies,
including for domestic battery manufacturing, and lower import and
excise taxes, combined with the growing presence of Chinese
carmakers have contributed to rapidly increasing sales."
The most visible of those Chinese carmakers is BYD, which has
chosen Thailand as its first
production base outside China.
When it entered the local market in 2022 with an imported model,
the Atto 3, Thais queued outside showrooms to buy it. Last year,
following the introduction of imported Dolphin and Seal models, BYD
sold 30,000 cars locally – a 40% share of the Thai EV market.
It also struck a deal for Bangkok-based Rêver Automotive to assemble its
battery-powered buses and trucks in the kingdom.
Now the opening of its new Rayong factory, with a production
capacity of 150,000 vehicles a year, seems destined to play a key
role in the company's lightning-swift international expansion –
especially across the 10-member Association of Southeast Asian
Nations (ASEAN), a market of more than 670 million people.
"We already have plans to export into ASEAN countries, the
Australian market and even Europe," Benson Ke
Yubin, General Manager of BYD Thailand said in an
interview.
With so many other potential locations to choose from, what
persuaded the Chinese BEV giant to invest in Thailand? Like other manufacturers interviewed
for this article, Ke singled out Thailand's supportive policies and the role of
the BOI in assisting investors. "We feel confident investing
here," he said.
If the speed of Thailand's
transition to BEVs sounds ambitious, it is based on a proven
strategy. To get where it is today as a global leader in
conventional ICE vehicle production, it not only attracted foreign
car manufacturers, but also developed a sophisticated onshore
supply chain of parts makers.
Now a prime objective is to attract investment in the
manufacturing of battery cells to complete the localization of the
most important parts of the EV supply chain.
But how did Thailand persuade
car and battery makers to move so swiftly? Several years ago, the
government identified "the car of the future" as one of five key
strategic new technology industries it aimed to develop.
Then in 2022 the incentives it offered foreign EV producers
included allowing them to import vehicles for the first two years
on condition they agreed to build factories soon after.
Those companies that begin local production by the end of 2024
get the most privileges, although automakers opening factories
between 2025 and 2027 will continue to be incentivized.
The result has been the surge of investment followed by a jump
in EV production as the new local factories come online.
First off the blocks was Great Wall Motor, which in 2020
acquired a conventional auto factory from U.S. giant General
Motors, then announced it would spend 22.6
billion baht (about $615
million) converting it to manufacture hybrids and EVs.
(NB: source is Reuters July 10, 2023
and Nikkei Feb 11, 2023). The first
hybrids rolled off the production line in June 2021 followed by EVs in January 2024.
Capable of producing 80,000 vehicles a year, including the Ora
Good Cat, Haval and Tank models, the company describes the Rayong
factory as its key production base for right hand drive vehicles in
Southeast Asia.
Then in March, Hozon fully opened what it termed "the first 100
percent EV factory in Thailand",
producing the Neta V small car which in Thailand competes in price with similar ICE
models.
Even before local manufacturing began, the Neta V had become an
established favorite in Thailand
following Hozon's launch of the imported model in 2022. Within a
year, 14,000 Netas had been sold – catapulting it to number two EV
brand and into the top 10 best selling car models of all types in
that year. "We took just one year and one model to gain consumer
acceptance in Thailand," Neta Auto
(Thailand) General Manager
Shu Gangzhi said in an interview.
"This gave us confidence to invest more in this market and that's
why we decided to start production here."
Now, with a production capacity of 30,000 annually, the company
is looking beyond Thailand's
borders. "We are also preparing the basis for exports to other
Asian markets and maybe other markets such as South Africa, for both left and right hand
drive vehicles," Shu said.
Why did Hozon choose Thailand?
"It has the most attractive, stable EV policy – very realistic –
with incentives for both consumers and manufacturers," Shu added.
"It is also a large and sophisticated market."
Both Great Wall and Hozon use batteries supplied by the new
SVOLT JV factory. While SVOLT was originally the battery unit of
Great Wall Motor Holdings, it now gets 70 percent of its business
from other manufacturers, SVOLT's Senior Vice President,
Feng Zhang, says.
Zhang says part of SVOLT's decision to choose Thailand for its first factory in Southeast Asia stemmed from its earlier
experience. "Progress has been fast and smooth and this gave us
very high confidence," he says.
The bottom line, however, was commercial. "We are doing our
business independently," Zhang adds. "We expect a very high EV
transformation in Thailand. In
China, the EV market share is
close to 50%. I think the same will happen in Thailand. This is going to be a huge market
for us."
Back at BMW's factory in Rayong, Managing Director Ruge doesn't
attribute Thailand's success at
winning investment entirely to its incentives or market
opportunities. He also gives high praise to the Thai workforce.
Of BMW Group's global production network comprising 30
manufacturing plants in 15 countries, Rayong is unique in that it
builds both cars and motorcycles under the same roof.
"It's a small plant, but it's extremely complex," Ruge says.
"And it's absolutely impressive how they can build these cars and
motorcycles without any compromise in quality. I have worked all
over the world, but what I have experienced here is really
exceptional."
For more information, please contact:
Thailand Board of Investment
Tel. +66 (0) 2553 8111
Website: www.boi.go.th
YouTube: Think Asia, Invest Thailand
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SOURCE Thailand Board of
Investment (BOI)