The recent surge in fuel prices due to the war in Iran has spurred demand for electric vehicles around the world, and Chinese car makers are making the most of the opportunity.

  • stumu415@lemmy.zip
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    17 hours ago

    Most Americans would not buy a Chinese car anyway.

    I love that Americans pretend to be the most important and competitive market. The combined population of Europe is twice that of the US. South East Asia is 700 million. And the choices in EV’s is triple that off the US.

    These are the markets Chinese manufacturers are after. These markets accept Chinese cars based on the price, quality and innovation.

    • architect@thelemmy.club
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      12 hours ago

      No one cares about population. It’s about gdp.

      American media pretends. Americans are just stupid.

      Id buy a Chinese car before an American one (as an American).

    • StrawberryPigtails@discuss.tchncs.de
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      10 hours ago

      I wouldn’t be so sure about that. If BYD were allowed to import their entire fleet to the US they would be at the top of my interest list on price alone even if the US prices were double what Ive seen in new articles.

      I’m personally in need of a new vehicle and everything, both the pickups I need and the passenger cars, are too expensive and has too much shit I don’t need installed by default. I’m literally holding my car together with ducktape and bailing wire waiting for the Slate Truck to come out.

      I think that if Slate Auto actually pulls off a inexpensive light duty EV pickup, and it proves reliable, it may completely change the landscape of the American auto market. I’m pretty sure that Ford and maybe Jeep will survive, but I’m not sure the others will unless they can start kicking out lower priced vehicles quickly.

    • Bakkoda@lemmy.world
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      14 hours ago

      Most Americans would jump at the opportunity of the price is right. They might tell you to your face they won’t but they will.

    • Soulg@ani.social
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      11 hours ago

      I want nothing more than to be able to buy such a cheap electric car that BYD could sell me.

    • BussyCat@lemmy.world
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      13 hours ago

      There are around 290m cars in the us for the 330m people

      There are around 420m cars in Europe for the 730m people

      So while the actual amount of cars in all of Europe is more than the US the percent car ownership in a single country is insane

      • stumu415@lemmy.zip
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        12 hours ago

        Than why don’t they buy foreign EV’s? There were options but now both Hyundai and Kia have stopped selling EV models last year solely in the US. In my opinion that makes the choice for BYD logical as these US established brands can’t even sell their EV’s.

        • aeiou_ckr@lemmy.world
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          9 hours ago

          Hyundai has pulled the ioniq 6 but the ioniq 5 and soon to be ioniq3 are sold in the USA still. Unless there was some news I missed. For Kia, Im not sure what their status is.

        • StrawberryPigtails@discuss.tchncs.de
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          10 hours ago

          My own opinion, they were too expensive and the EV charging network wasn’t built up enough to prevent people from feeling like the available range options weren’t large enough.

        • BussyCat@lemmy.world
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          3 hours ago

          If you are making an ad campaign, all of the US speaks the same language, generally has the same safety regulations, and a much larger percent of the people are your target ad personnel

          The EU is a cohesive unit for regulations but speak many different language and once you branch out of the EU to all of Europe you can see why there are huge advantages to advertising in the US.

          So no it’s not the absolute number that matters