Volkswagen will attempt to grow its share of the electric car market in China by accelerating development through localised R&D and a range of partnerships with domestic tech firms.
The German giant has a strong position in China's car market: the Volkswagen Group sold 3.23 million cars in the country last year, of which the Volkswagen brand accounted for 2.2 million. But the vast majority of those sales were of combustion-powered cars, and while it dominates that market, it is a comparatively small player in China’s EV market.
Volkswagen sold around 155,000 EVs in China last year, compared with 1.3 million for BYD, a difference that has helped the Chinese firm – which sold 2.5 million cars in total – overhaul the German giant as the country’s best-selling car brand in 2023.
That’s a significant moment, given Volkswagen has long regarded China as something of a second home. It was the first foreign car firm to enter the market when private car ownership was allowed in the 1980s, and this year marks 40 years in the market.
“Volkswagen has developed mobility in China: we were the first and we are deeply rooted in Chinese society,” says Volkswagen Cars China boss Stefan Mecha, who is also the sales chief for the VW Group in the region. “We are almost considered a local brand, and we have huge history. But history only helps so much. We need to develop the brand further and reinvent ourselves.”
The challenge is to grow its meagre EV sales in China while also protecting its dominant position in the ICE market. “What we are striving for is to bring intelligent connected vehicles to all our customers in China,” says Mecha. “Volkswagen as a people’s brand applies even more in China and, for us, it's extremely important that these intelligent connected vehicles will be brought to a broader audience.”
The firm’s plan to achieve this is built around the pillars of ‘in China, for China’. That will include the launch of a new ID UX sub-brand aimed at affluent younger customers in China’s main cities, a partnership with fast-rising start-up Xpeng and greater collaboration with other local tech firms.
Volkswagen will launch more than 30 new cars in China by 2030, including 16 EVs, four plug-in hybrids and 12 ICE cars. As seen by the new ID Code concept, Mecha says the firm will move “towards more design-oriented and technology-oriented brand DNA”.
Those new models will include the ID Code, and the first ID UX model, which will be called the ID Unyx. It will be built on the existing MEB platform by Volkswagen Anhui (the new name for a joint venture with Chinese firm JAC), and will essentially be a rebadged version of the Cupra Tavascan.
The firm has developed a new Volkswagen China Technology Company (VCTC), headed by former tech chief Thomas Ulbrich. Based in Hefei, Anhui, the centre will employ around 3000 people and will be tasked with developing a new China-only China Main Platform (CMP).
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