Please register to access this content.
To continue viewing the content you love, please sign in or create a new account
Dismiss
This content is for our paying subscribers only

Auto News

China's EV export boom fuels surge in demand for new car-carrying ships

Shippers ordering a record number of car-carrying vessels to support a boom in EV exports



Car carrier vessel "BYD Explorer No.1” arrives at Xiaomo International Logistics Port in Shenzhen, south China's Guangdong Province, on January 14, 2024. The vehicle carrier, leased to Chinese automaker BYD, its maiden voyage ceremony at a port in Shenzhen, south China's Guangdong Province.
Image Credit: Xinhua News

Beijing/Shanghai: Chinese automakers and shippers are ordering a record number of car-carrying vessels to support a boom in EV exports, data showed, putting China on course to amass the world's fourth-largest fleet by 2028.

Get exclusive content with Gulf News WhatsApp channel

China currently has the world's eighth-largest fleet with 33 car-carrying ships, showed data from shipping consultancy Veson Nautical. Japan has the world's largest with 283 ships, followed by Norway's 102, South Korea's 72 and Isle of Man's 61.

47

Number of car-carrying ships ordered by Chinese companies.

But Chinese companies have 47 ships on order, accounting for a quarter of all orders globally. Buyers include SAIC Motor, Chery Automobile and EV giant BYD, as well as shippers such as COSCO and China Merchants on behalf of Chinese automakers.

Advertisement

"After this armada has been delivered to China, the Chinese-controlled car carrier fleet will jump from current 2.4 per cent to 8.7 per cent," Veson analyst Andrea de Luca said.

"We expect to see new trade routes established almost exclusively for Chinese OEMs (automakers)." The jump in orders has mostly benefited Chinese shipyards, which received 82 per cent of orders globally, the data showed.

A BYD car ship with capacity for up to 5,000 vehicles on board. China's auto industry is emebraching a new era of exports. According to China's General Administration of Customs, China's auto exports surged to 5.22 million vehicles in 2023, up 57.4 percent year on year.
Image Credit: Xinhua

Competition

With price-squeezing competition, cost-conscious consumers and a sluggish economy, automakers have ramped up expansion into markets where their vehicles command higher prices than at home.

Advertisement

Last year, China overtook Japan as the biggest auto exporter.

400,000

number of cars BYD seeks to export from China this 2024

Expansion

BYD alone exported over 240,000 cars in 2023, about 8 per cent of its global sales, and plans to export up to 400,000 this year.

Foreign peers such as Tesla and Volkswagen have also expanded production in China for export to take advantage of the country's cost-effective supply chain.

Rising shipping costs and local government support have persuaded automakers to buy ships themselves. By the end of 2023, the daily rate to charter a 6,500-vehicle carrier reached $115,000, more than seven times the 2019 average, showed data from shipping consultancy Clarkson.

Advertisement

But the export rise has prompted the U.S. and EU to accuse China of trying to deal with excess industrial capacity by flooding their markets with low-priced products.

Capacity

The government said the focus on capacity is misguided and that it understates innovation and overstates the role of state support in driving growth.

The risk of excess capacity is also high in shipbuilding, said senior economist Xu Tianchen at the Economist Intelligence Unit, with China the usual target of finger-pointing.

However, "there remain some niches where the market probably hasn't saturated, such as car cargo ships," Xu said.

US Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen raised overcapacity concerns during a four-day trip to China. Meanwhile, China's Minister of Commerce Wang Wentao is visiting Europe, where he is likely to discuss a European Commission probe into whether Chinese-made EVs unfairly benefit from subsidies.

Advertisement
Vinfast EV cars are seen during a car shipment to the U.S. in Haiphong city, Vietnam, November 25, 2022.
Image Credit: Reuters
Advertisement