JUDY WOODRUFF: China has historically been
known more for the pollution it produces than
the gas it saves.
But China is now also the world's largest
market for electric cars.
And China's electric vehicle market is transforming
not only Chinese automakers, but forcing international
companies to ramp up production as well.
With the support of the Pulitzer Center, we
return to our series "China: Power & Prosperity."
Special correspondent Katrina Yu begins her
report in Hefei, China.
KATRINA YU: In one of the world's most advanced
factories, a start-up is working to ensure
the future of electric cars is driven by China.
NIO is described as China's Tesla.
It produces electric SUVs for environmentally
conscious millennials.
Each vehicle comes with an artificially intelligent
dashboard robot, access to drive-through NIO
power stations that swap out dead batteries,
and exclusive NIO clubhouses.
CEO William Li says NIO is more than a car.
WILLIAM LI, CEO, NIO (through translator):
NIO doesn't only want to be an electric car
brand, but a lifestyle brand.
We hope to create a community which starts
from the car.
It's about living well, living consciously,
and creating a happy way of living.
KATRINA YU: That happiness is mostly for China's
upper middle class,
The ES6 and ES8 are priced between $40,000
to $70,000.
Li says Chinese drivers are slowly seeing
the benefits of owning an electric vehicle,
but many still need to be convinced to make
the switch from gas or diesel.
WILLIAM LI (through translator): These days
people still aren't familiar with electric
cars and can have some misunderstandings.
We need to provide a better environment for
customers, so they can better understand the
benefits.
KATRINA YU: Providing this better environment
is exactly what the Chinese government is
trying to do.
Earlier this year, a state-owned fund injected
NIO with $1.4 billion.
And the government doesn't just support companies.
It also incentivizes consumers.
In Beijing, Zhu Mengxiao's electric car is
worth about $30,000 dollars.
But after government subsidies, she only paid
$18,000.
Zhu took me for a spin.
In China, owning a car is one thing.
Having the right to drive it can be another.
To reduce overcrowding on roads, the government
carefully manages license plates.
Residents can only get one through a lottery,
but the odds of winning are low if you're
driving a gas guzzler.
ZHU MENGXIAO, Beijing Resident (through translator):
It's like a real lottery.
There's a chance that you won't win anything
your whole life.
When we first applied for a license plate,
we were waiting a long time and didn't receive
one for a gas-powered car.
Only after the exceptions appeared for electric
cars could we buy this car.
KATRINA YU: Zhu received her electric car
license plate within a few months.
She was initially worried about the car's
battery life, but says the pros outweigh the
cons.
ZHU MENGXIAO (through translator): With more
advanced technologies, more people are likely
to choose electric cars, especially since
the price of petrol fluctuates and often jumps.
Electric cars can be cheaper to use and more
eco-friendly.
KATRINA YU: Putting more eco-friendly cars
on China's roads is critical.
Just outside Beijing, a coal plant belches
smoke, a reminder that China remains the world's
largest emitter of greenhouse gases.
Two-thirds of China's electricity comes from
coal.
And it often leads to days like this.
Reducing air pollution is central to China's
campaign to make cars green, says industry
analyst Qiu Kaijin.
QIU KAIJIN, Vehicle Industry Analyst (through
translator): The government's goal of cutting
emissions is aligned with its promotion of
the electric vehicle industry.
In total, there are about 400 million vehicles
in China.
And, every day, they produce a huge amount
of emissions.
If a number of those become electric, then
it will have a great impact.
KATRINA YU: Electric cars are also key to
reducing the country's reliance on foreign
oil, says government adviser Wei Jianguo.
WEI JIANGUO, Government Policy Adviser (through
translator): China is a country with few resources.
Local production doesn't meet the country's
needs, so China needs electric cars.
Since encouraging them, we reduced petrol
consumption by nine million tons.
KATRINA YU: That's a reduction of less than
1 percent.
But with public transportation increasingly
going green, that figure is set to grow.
Top-selling electric vehicle manufacturer
BYD has turned the southern metropolis of
Shenzhen into the world's first city to rely
only on electric buses.
Shenzhen alone now operates more electric
buses than every city in the world outside
of China combined.
BYD is also greening the city's taxi fleet.
Almost all of the city's 22,000 cabs are electric.
But some drivers wish they weren't forced
to make the switch.
YUE ZHANWEN, Taxi Driver (through translator):
Electric taxi drivers definitely earn less
because it takes several hours to recharge
the car.
Sometimes, we have to wait in line.
Two months ago, I waited in line one hour
or more for a charging station.
Then it took me two hours to recharge.
Those are hours I could have been working.
KATRINA YU: But he has no choice.
The central planners of China's government
say they're committed to ensuring the electric
vehicle market becomes a world leader.
This year China, imposed an emissions credit
system that requires car manufacturers to
reduce emissions below a certain level, or
pay for credits from other companies.
That's an expenditure they want to avoid,
so they are being compelled to go more green.
And that applies to domestic and international
carmakers.
At a plant in Foshan in China's south, German
automaker Audi is building its first fully
electric car designed especially for the Chinese
market.
Audi plans to launch 30 hybrid and electric
models around the world by 2025.
China is Audi's biggest market.
And China's drive for new energy vehicles,
or NEVs, is impossible to ignore, says director
executive Heinz-Willi Vassen.
HEINZ-WILLI VASSEN, Director of Digitalization,
Audi: This is a key element here in China,
so it would be a very big risk not to be able
to offer NEV technology in the Chinese market,
so, for us, not acceptable.
We sell more than 30 percent of our cars,
we target to have 40 percent of our cars sold
in China.
So, for us, it's a key market.
KATRINA YU: Audi isn't the only global brand
lining up to comply with China's e-strategy.
Ford and General Motors will also launch electric
models made specifically for the Chinese market
by the end of this year, while Tesla's first
factory outside the U.S. is nearing completion
in Shanghai.
But for Chinese brands, there have been some
speed bumps.
NIO is struggling with months of sluggish
sales and reports of battery fires.
The company has had to fire 10 percent of
its work force.
And across the country, a weakening economy
has reduced auto sales, including a 7 percent
slump in electric vehicle sales.
It hasn't helped that consumer subsidies began
being scaled back in June, driving up the
cost to buy one.
NIO CEO William Li downplays concerns.
He says his company and the electric industry
overall are just starting to get on the road.
WILLIAM LI (through translator): The car industry
is constantly changing.
There are always new challenges.
We have more and more customers, and their
situation is changing too.
It is not easy and it takes time.
KATRINA YU: But government regulations and
a massive market will help ensure momentum
toward green cars and that policy-makers in
Beijing, not Washington or California, are
in the driver's seat.
For the "PBS NewsHour," I'm Katrina Yu in
Hefei.
