Spyke
mander.xyz

Australia's car manufacturing industry is basically non-existent, they import almost all of them. The EU and US have huge manufacturing bases they're trying to protect

41
protistreply
mander.xyz

Really? I don't know a ton about this, but it looks like American and Japanese manufacturers are the only ones to have ever operated in Australia

3
Heavybellreply
lemmy.world

I'm not super into cars, but it's my understanding Holden was a local manufacturer that got bought out by GM? Or if not that, then they were making specifically Australian vehicles despite being part of GM, much like Ford Australia used to. Both ended up shutting down operations down here, so now we have nothing local.

7
Miaoureply
jlai.lu

So not the fault of USA manufacturers, but Australia's incompetent leadership

-3

We had Australian made and designed cars, then gm bought out Holden and ran it into the ground before shuttering the brand entirely.

5

Adelaide killed big chunks of their public transport system to appease Holden, who fucked off anyway. Still salty.

13

Thanks to Joe Hockey and the LNP government who decided it wasn’t strategically important to have high value manufacturing in Australia.

4
lemmy.world

If EU manufacturers didn't charge 35k for a car that barely fits 3 people, we wouldn't need to turn to these chinese cars.

27
Auxreply
lemmy.world

I present you our lord and saviour - Dacia Spring!

2
filisterreply
lemmy.world

This car only works for a city for short trips though, as the range is very limited.

0

America: "it's fine when corporations move manufacturing to China and sell back home for a huge profit... But it's not okay for China to sell their manufactured goods in the USA"

26
lemmy.world

Well, I feel misled. The graphic shows a Volvo as a Chinese manufactured vehicle.

Sales of Chinese made EVs in Australia

  • Tesla - 46,116
  • BYD - 12,438
  • MG - 5,928
  • Volvo - 3,949

They're counting Tesla as a Chinese EV.

16
ShortFusereply
lemmy.world

In China. But the majority of Teslas are manufactured are in China, and no one really considers Teslas "Chinese cars" or "Chinese EVs".

6
ShortFusereply
lemmy.world

Doesn't stop it from being misleading.

It's called "burying the lede".

-2
Miaoureply
jlai.lu

It's misleading based on your arguably less important criteria, but OK

4
ShortFusereply
lemmy.world

Wow, you think Teslas are "Chinese EVs". You're literally the first person I've encountered to think so. Also why lead into an article with a graphic of the least selling vehicle?

-3

In Australia they’re all manufactured in China. So it’s a Chinese car.

Cars in high developed economies like Australia have until recently been mainly manufactured in highly developed economies like EU, Japan, US etc.

1

Because the Australian Teslas and Volvos are made in China. It's a Chinese EV. Volvo is owned by a Chinese Company.

8

American imperialism will never allow working, quality Chinese cars. You will buy Tesla and YOU WILL like it!

15
BigPotatoreply
lemmy.world

Chinese manufacturing won't allow quality Chinese cars...

At least they won't have them in the export line.

-4
lemmy.world

If China gave them away for free, the Sinophobes would probably still complain.

8

I imagine there's a few things above sinophobia for the average car buyer. Just a few.

16
regulreply

did they install it via an electric car?

10
aussie.zone

Something weird https://ace-ev.com.au/

  • Claim to be "made in Australia"
  • Don't provide any photos of their production line or factory.
  • Underpowered (max speed 100kmph)

Perhaps imported and then assembled in Australia?

2

Isn't that the new bullshit line nowadays? Companies used designed in , but everything is still made in China.

1

This is the best summary I could come up with:


This year, vehicles from China became the third most popular choice for new car sales in Australia, knocking South Korea — the home of Kia and Hyundai — down to fourth place, and rapidly gaining ground on manufacturing leaders Thailand and Japan.

President Ursula von der Leyen said global markets were being "flooded with cheaper electric cars" with prices "kept artificially low by huge state subsidies".

The Chinese government has spent decades trying to help its flagging auto industry catch up to the giants of Europe, Asia and the US, and while it failed in the era of petrochemical propulsion, it found success in the age of the electric vehicle.

Growing consumer awareness, cost competitiveness, technological advances and a cut in tariffs thanks to the Australia-China Free Trade Agreement are all helping to drive sales of Chinese vehicles in Australia.

A spokesperson from Australia's Federal Chamber of Automotive Industries (FCAI) said increased competition and the availability of Chinese-produced vehicles had "enhanced consumer choice, allowing Australians to purchase cars that best fit their work, recreation, and family".

Professor Zhang said despite claims China was "flooding the market" with EVs, the global vehicle fleet was still dominated by internal combustion engines and consumers would ultimately "choose products that suit their needs".


The original article contains 997 words, the summary contains 209 words. Saved 79%. I'm a bot and I'm open source!

6
sh.itjust.works

I love that the cover image for this article about buying Chinese EVs is a car from a Swedish manufacturer (Polestar, owned by Volvo). Western media really knows jack shit about the Chinese EV market.

-10

Plus Tesla's for the Australian market are built in China. Heck, I think some of the new BMWs are built in China now as well.

6

You reached the end