City
Epaper

Chinese EV maker BYD set to enter South Korean market in low-cost segment

By IANS | Updated: June 18, 2024 14:10 IST

Seoul, June 18 The expected entry of China's BYD Auto into the South Korean consumer electric vehicle (EV) ...

Open in App

Seoul, June 18 The expected entry of China's BYD Auto into the South Korean consumer electric vehicle (EV) market this year will likely intensify competition within the low-cost segment of the market, which globally has seen a stagnation in growth as of late due to the so-called EV adoption chasm, according to industry watchers on Tuesday.

The Chinese EV maker has applied for emissions and noise certification for its midsized EV sedan Seal with the National Institute of Environmental Research under the South Korean environment ministry on June 5, marking the beginning of BYD's domestic release procedure.

The process, which checks factors, such as the driving range on a single charge, is known to take around two to three months. Performance evaluations linked to a review for EV subsidies are conducted separately by the Korea Environment Corp, reports Yonhap news agency.

In terms of size and performance, BYD's Seal model, whose entry price trim is set at 179,800 yuan ($24,730), is comparable to Tesla's Model 3 and Hyundai Motor's Ioniq 6.

Market watchers expect the model to become eligible for EV subsidies when released. Some, however, note the use of lithium iron phosphate (LFP) batteries in the model could work against the model due to the low recyclable value of LFP batteries.

Other more affordable BYD models, including the Dolphin hatchback and the Atto 3 compact crossover, are also reportedly being considered for release in the country.

BYD has already applied for trademarks for six models in the domestic market, including those for the Seal, Dolphin and Atto models.

If BYD successfully launches its passenger EV cars in South Korea with competitive pricing, it could impact the domestic electric vehicle market, currently dominated by Hyundai Motor and Kia.

South Korean automakers have already seen a decrease in the domestic EV market share, dropping 3.5 percentage points to 76.6 percent last year, especially in line with the release of Tesla's Model Y vehicles produced in China.

Local automakers, too, are moving to introduce more affordable models with a better value proposition, notably improved battery capacity.

Hyundai plans to unveil the EV version of its mini SUV Casper at the upcoming Busan International Mobility show later this month. Kia's EV3, the company's third and latest EV model after the larger EV6 and EV9 models, is widely expected to become a hit.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

International"We win regardless...": US President Donald Trump remarks on US-Iran talks in Islamabad

NationalJKSA seeks EAM Jaishankar's intervention for repatriation of the mortal remains of 6 J-K youths killed in Kuwait road accident

International'Fuel Pass' app crashes on debut in Dhaka; drivers face long queues and technical glitches

NationalPM Modi announces ex-gratia of Rs 2 lakh for Katihar road accident victims; expresses condolences

InternationalFirst phase of US-Iran talks concludes in Islamabad; written texts exchanged

Business Realted Stories

BusinessIndia's marine product exports reach Rs 62,408 crore in 2024-25, exporters urged to work towards Rs 1 lakh crore target

BusinessDelhi BJP chief Virendra Sachdeva welcomes draft EV policy

BusinessIndia turns crisis into opportunity by augmenting strategic petroleum reserve capacities, diversifying imports

BusinessAIDA urges Centre to roll out ethanol-based cooking nationwide to cut reliance on imported LPG

BusinessGovt raises diesel duties, hikes ATF levy with immediate effect