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Trump pledges additional 100% tariffs on China by Nov. 1

10 October 2025 at 23:16
In an aerial view, a container ship arrives at the Port of Oakland on Aug. 1, 2025 in Oakland, California. (Photo by Justin Sullivan/Getty Images)

In an aerial view, a container ship arrives at the Port of Oakland on Aug. 1, 2025 in Oakland, California. (Photo by Justin Sullivan/Getty Images)

President Donald Trump threatened to add a 100% tariff rate on Chinese goods Friday, saying in a social media post he was responding to export controls from the world’s second-largest economy.

“China has taken an extraordinarily aggressive position on Trade in sending an extremely hostile letter to the World, stating that they were going to, effective November 1st, 2025, impose large scale Export Control on virtually every product they make, and some not even made by them,” Trump wrote on Truth Social.

The United States would respond with the 100% tariff on Chinese goods, also starting Nov. 1, he said. The tariffs would be stacked onto existing tariffs his administration has imposed on the country, he said.

Trump added that he would impose his own export controls “on any and all critical software.”

“It is impossible to believe that China would have taken such an action, but they have, and the rest is History,” he wrote.

Trump left open the possibility of scrapping or adjusting the additional tariffs before November, saying in the Oval Office late Friday that “We’re gonna have to see what happens.”

“That’s why I made it Nov. 1,” he said. “We’ll see what happens.”

He told reporters he has not canceled a planned meeting with Chinese President Xi Jinping, at an international economic conference in South Korea this week, but raised some doubt that the meeting would take place.

“I don’t know that we’re going to have it,” he said. “But I’m going to be there regardless, so I would assume we might have it.”

Tariffs a main part of Trump policy

Trump has used tariffs, taxes paid by the importer of foreign goods, as the central tool of his trade policy, applying broad tariffs on U.S. allies and adversaries alike, with a particular focus on China.

The two countries imposed escalating trade barriers on one another since Trump announced wide-ranging tariffs in early April. The U.S. tariff rate for Chinese goods peaked at 145% before the two sides negotiated an end to the trade war. 

Chinese goods still see a base tariff rate of 30%.

Trump invoked emergency authority to raise tariffs on China, arguing that the tariffs were a putative measure for China’s inability to control fentanyl supplies flowing into the U.S., but federal courts are still deciding the legality of that move.

Stellantis’ Chinese Brand Has A Giant Flagship SUV Coming For The Price Of A RAV4

  • Leapmotor D19 is a new flagship SUV debuting globally on October 16.
  • It will offer both fully electric and range-extender hybrid powertrains.
  • The large SUV targets premium rivals with high-tech features and style.

Leapmotor, the Chinese EV manufacturer partly owned by Stellantis, continues to expand its lineup into new segments. Fresh off the debut of the B05/Lafa 5 hatchback last month, the company is now teasing its new flagship SUV, the D19. Scheduled for an official debut on October 16, the D19 is promising to deliver premium features and cutting-edge tech at an accessible price point.

More: Stellantis Just Sent Europe A Warning With This Chinese-Built Electric Hatch

The official teasers highlight the shape of the full-size SUV and its lighting signature, with slim DRLs up front and a full-width LED bar at the rear. That said, photos of the model have already surfaced on Chinese social media.

Big SUV Energy

In terms of proportions, the D19 lines up with other full-size electrified SUVs from China such as the Li Auto L9, Dongfeng Yipai 008, Chery Fulwin T11, GAC Trumpchi S9, Zeekr 9X, Nio Onvo L90, and Geely Galaxy M9.

One of the most distinctive design elements is the thick chrome trim that wraps around the side windows and obscures the D-pillar, giving it a Rolls-Royce Cullinan meets Mercedes-Maybach GLS vibe.

It also features split headlights, clean body surfacing, and chrome-finished disc wheels that further echo styling cues from Rolls-Royce and Maybach. At around 5.2 meters (204.7 inches) in length, the D19 is roughly the same size as a BMW X7 or a Mercedes GLS.

We haven’t seen the interior yet, but it’s expected to feature an advanced digital cockpit with a dedicated passenger display, along with high-quality materials throughout the cabin. The D19 will reportedly run on dual Qualcomm Snapdragon 8797 chipsets, one handling infotainment, the other powering the ADAS suite. Leaked images also show a roof-mounted LiDAR sensor.

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While full technical specifications haven’t been released, the D19 will be offered with both fully electric and range-extender hybrid powertrains. The battery-electric version is expected to offer a CLTC range of over 630 km (392 miles), while the extended-range version should cover more than 1,300 km (808 miles) between charging and refueling stops.

How Much Will It Cost?

Perhaps most noteworthy is the pricing. Leapmotor has suggested a starting price between ¥250,000 and ¥300,000, which converts to around $35,000 to $42,000. And yes, that figure sounds like a bargain for anyone trying to buy a car in the West these days.

In fact, that’s roughly what you’d pay for a hybrid Toyota RAV4 or Honda CR-V in the States, or, worse still, a mid-level Toyota Yaris Cross if you happen to live in Germany. And that’s not even getting into the more painful pricing realities in other parts of Europe.

Even so, you might be surprised to learn that the D19 won’t be the cheapest in its class. The Geely Galaxy M9 undercuts it with a current starting price of ¥173,800 ($24,400), thanks to discounts.

When it launches later this year, the D19 will sit above the T03, B01, B10, C01, C10, C11, and C16, making it the new range-topper in Leapmotor’s domestic lineup. Spy shots have also hinted at a flagship minivan currently in development, which may share the same platform as the D19.

More: China’s Trumpchi S9 Is Here To Make Luxury SUVs Great Again For The People

On September 25, Leapmotor announced that its one millionth vehicle had rolled off the production line. The automaker reaffirmed its commitment to “fully in-house R&D” and its goal of becoming a “respected, world-class smart electric vehicle company.”

 Stellantis’ Chinese Brand Has A Giant Flagship SUV Coming For The Price Of A RAV4

Leapmotor

Xiaomi Blames iPhone For EV Taking Off On Its Own

  • CCTV footage shows a Xiaomi sedan moving on its own as the owner chases it.
  • Xiaomi confirmed the EV received a valid remote parking command via phone.
  • The owner later verified that the company’s official explanation was accurate.

A video of a Xiaomi SU7 sedan seemingly taking itself for a spin went viral over the weekend in China, sparking safety concerns. The internet was quick to imagine hacked cars and rogue AI, but Xiaomi quickly shut down the drama, claiming that the mysterious drive was simply triggered by a remote command from the owner’s Apple iPhone.

More: Xiaomi Boss Admits They Bought Teslas And Tore Them Down To Learn Every Secret

The incident took place on September 30, when the owner, identified as Li Xiaoshuang, parked his light blue SU7 outside a store in the city of Weihai. Minutes later, while he was inside the shop with a woman, the car began to creep forward with no one behind the wheel. Realizing what was happening, Li rushed outside and sprinted after his runaway EV.

A Confusing Start

After sharing the surveillance footage, the owner contacted Xiaomi’s customer service to report the car’s strange behavior. The representative informed him that the EV had received a remote command from a device labeled “iPhone 16.2.” The owner, however, insisted he hadn’t touched his phone nor did he own an iPhone 16 and provided the video as proof.

The mix-up was later clarified when engineers confirmed that “16.2” wasn’t referring to a newer iPhone model at all, but to the internal identifier Apple assigns to the owner’s iPhone 15 Pro Max. Likewise, an iPhone 16 Pro also linked to the vehicle, belonging to the woman seen in the video, appeared under the code “17.1.”

Technical Verification

After reviewing the EV’s data logs and the smartphones’ activity records, Xiaomi engineers confirmed that the car had, in fact, received a valid remote parking command from the owner’s iPhone at that exact moment. The company also verified that every system operated correctly.

More: China Recalling Over A Third Of All Xiaomi SU7s After Deadly Crash

The company issued a formal apology for the misunderstanding and thanked the owner for cooperating in the investigation. They also emphasized that all vehicle systems operated as intended. The owner eventually acknowledged Xiaomi’s findings after witnessing the data verification himself, and urged others to stop spreading false claims about software bugs or hacks.

Accidental Commands, Real Consequences

So what could have triggered the remote parking command without the owner realizing it? The most likely explanation is that the feature was unintentionally activated through the iPhone app or its voice assistant.

Still, the idea that a simple tap or phrase can send a two-ton machine rolling on its own should give manufacturers pause. As cars become more like smartphones on wheels, it might be time for automakers to impose tighter safeguards on how these systems talk to each other, rather than assuming every “smart” feature is foolproof.

Below you’ll find the official statements from both Xiaomi and the owner.


Xiaomi’s Official Statement

Regarding the recent online video of a Xiaomi car suddenly driving away, we attach great importance to this incident and immediately established a special task force to investigate and collaborate with the user to verify the situation.

Both parties verified the user’s authorized mobile app operation logs and vehicle data, reaching a consensus: “The vehicle’s backend data matches the iPhone 15 Pro Max’s operation logs, response times, and vehicle exit commands, ruling out any vehicle quality issues.”

 Xiaomi Blames iPhone For EV Taking Off On Its Own
Xiaomi SU7

During the investigation, with the user’s consent, we obtained vehicle backend data and operation logs from two phones with vehicle control permissions: the female owner’s iPhone 16 Pro and the male owner’s iPhone 15 Pro Max, with corresponding device model identifiers of iPhone 17.1 and iPhone 16.2, respectively.

The vehicle’s backend data shows that during the time window described by the user, the vehicle received a parking assist command from the iPhone 15 Pro Max, which activated the parking assist feature (activation requires the vehicle to be within close range of the phone’s Bluetooth connection) and initiated the exit.

When contacting online customer service regarding the user’s feedback, they stated that the parking assist command originated from an iPhone 16. We have verified that our online customer service representative confused the device model identifier (iPhone 16,2) with the corresponding device model (iPhone 15 Pro Max) during communication with the user, leading to misunderstanding and miscommunication. We apologize for this and will continue to improve our service efforts.

Xiaomi Auto always prioritizes user safety and user experience. Thank you for your attention and support.

Owner’s Response:

I am the owner of the vehicle in question. The above information is true. The Xiaomi Auto team has verified the data with me in person and confirmed it is correct. Thank you for your professionalism and service. Please refrain from spreading rumors. Thank you.

 Xiaomi Blames iPhone For EV Taking Off On Its Own

Sources: Weibo, Xiaomi

There’s More To Audi’s $33K Chinese EV Than Cheap Labor

  • The all-electric Audi E5 Sportback in China starts at just under $34,000.
  • Low battery and energy costs in China help Audi keep prices affordable.
  • An equivalent Audi EV in Europe would likely cost at least twice as much.

While Audi has steadily built up its electric range, none of its current EVs have really made a breakthrough in Western markets, aside from the occasional seasonal bright spot. In China, though, the brand may have finally found its moment. The new AUDI E5 Sportback pulled in over 10,000 pre-orders within just half an hour after its debut.

A key reason for its popularity? The kind of price tag you’d expect of a Toyota, not a premium German EV.

Bargain With Big Numbers

In China, the AUDI E5 starts at just 235,900 yuan, which is the equivalent of $33,100 or €28,211 at current exchange rates. That’s a heck of a deal for a luxury car that includes a 76 kWh battery pack, a 295 hp rear motor, and has a claimed range of 384 miles (618 km) under local testing standards.

The upper trims go much further, offering up to 776 hp, while buyers also get a wraparound digital cockpit, and software tailored specifically to Chinese buyers. The interior mixes Alcantara with leather, while the tech list is stacked with features usually reserved for higher-end models.

To put that in perspective, Audi’s least expensive crossover in Germany is the Q2, a sub-compact that begins at €29,000 ($34,000 or 242,500 yuan) for the entry-level 116 hp 3-cylinder TFSI, a price that includes Germany’s value-added tax, or standard sales tax.

More: Audi Launches New AUDI Brand Without Four-Ring Logo In China

Unlike Audi models sold elsewhere, the E5 is exclusive to China and even carries a new badge. Instead of the traditional four rings, the grille simply reads “AUDI,” a deliberate break from tradition designed to appeal to younger, tech-oriented buyers.

Speaking to Germany’s N-TV, industry expert Ferdinand Dudenhöffer described the move as “clever positioning” and a “liberating step,” arguing that the traditional rings carried too much baggage from the past.

Why It Costs So Little

 There’s More To Audi’s $33K Chinese EV Than Cheap Labor

While it might be tempting to chalk up the low sticker price to cheaper wages in China, labor costs account for only around ten percent of total vehicle costs, according to the CAR Institute, N-TV reports.

A slew of other important factors come into play that help AUDI keep the E5 so affordable by Western standards. Battery costs in China are lower, energy is much cheaper, and local production operates with far greater efficiency. On top of that, Germany levies a 19 percent sales tax (VAT), while China applies just 10 percent for regular cars and in some cases zero percent for EVs, depending on price and incentives.

Perhaps most telling, though, is that manufacturers there are willing to operate with margins far slimmer than what German brands typically tolerate. That’s something we rarely, if ever, see in the West. Were a vehicle like the E5 to be produced and sold in Europe, it’d likely cost twice as much, if not more.

Storm Clouds At Home

Back in Germany, the contrast could not be starker. The industry’s struggles are well known, with Audi planning to cut around 7,500 jobs by 2029, Mercedes deep in restructuring, and Porsche rolling back its EV plans. BMW has fared a little better, yet it too has shed thousands of temporary positions.

According to a recent study by EY, Germany’s automotive industry lost more than 50,000 jobs last year, erasing roughly seven percent of its workforce. Compared with pre-COVID levels, the sector employs 112,000 fewer people today. No other domestic industry has suffered losses on this scale.

Future Written In Asia

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Against this backdrop, Dudenhöffer argued that Audi’s decision to launch a separate brand in China was both brave and instructive. “Competitors BMW and Mercedes are now under pressure,” he said. “If the price difference becomes too large, customers will switch to Audi.”

He also issued a more general warning. “If the price collapse from China reaches Europe and Chinese models take over here, the Germans need a response,” he said.

“If we don’t learn to build cars that interest customers – with the right price and the right costs – Germany has a problem. We can watch China and say: We won’t get involved in this shameless price war. Or we can say: We need a China strategy.”

Dudenhöffer added that the future of the industry will not be decided in Europe but in Asia. “The vehicles must be built for the customers, not for the employees,” he cautioned. “Without a China strategy, Audi, BMW, and Mercedes are finished globally. And without a China strategy, Germany will also lose its status as an automotive nation.”

John Halas contributed to this story.

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Ford’s Electrified Bronco Arrives In China With A Pop Up Roof Surprise

  • Ford has begun accepting orders for the Bronco Basecamp in China.
  • Early customers get a free pop-up glass roof, made for camping.
  • The model offers fully electric and range-extended powertrains.

Following its debut at the Chengdu Auto Show, Ford has opened orders for the new Bronco Smart Horse / Basecamp, the third model in its Bronco family developed exclusively for China. While that’s not too interesting, the company is sweetening the deal by giving early customers a free ‘one-click roof-lift camping package.’

More: Ford Shows Off Wild Bronco With No Roof, No Doors, And Nothing To Lose

Despite sounding like a pop-up tent, it’s simply a panoramic glass roof that tilts 14.2 inches (360 mm) skyward to provide more headroom above the second-row. This promises to be more comfortable than it sounds as the front seats fold down and have headrests that lower at the push of a button.

Customers can also fold the second-row seats down and apparently cover both rows with a Bronco-branded inflatable mattress.

Tailgate Tricks

The camping theme continues at the rear, where the Basecamp features what Ford calls a “mountain kitchen” on the tailgate. It includes a fold-down table as well as a magnetic strip for holding knives and silverware. There’s also a drinks holder as well as an integrated bottle opener.

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While this sounds a little odd, Ford refers to the Basecamp as their “first all-terrain camping SUV.” The company also noted customers can get ¥12,000 ($1,685) worth of free equipment by placing a ¥1,000 ($140) deposit on the vehicle.

Power in Two Flavors

Ford hasn’t said much about the Bronco Basecamp, but the fully electric variant has a dual-motor all-wheel drive system producing a combined output of 445 hp (332 kW / 451 PS). It’s powered by a 105.4 kWh battery pack, which delivers 404 miles (650 km) of range.

Customers can also opt for an extended-range variant, which has a turbocharged 1.5-liter engine, two electric motors, and a 43.7kWh battery pack. This version has 416 hp (310 kW / 421 PS) and an electric-only range of 137 miles (220 km). However, the ICE engine extends the overall range to 758 miles (1,220 km) in the CLTC cycle.

Size Matters

The new SUV rides on a 116.1-inch (2,950 mm) wheelbase, the same as the full-size four-door Bronco in the US and far longer than the 105.1 inches (2,670 mm) of the Bronco Sport. Overall length also stretches to 197.8 inches (5,025 mm), making it larger than both the Bronco at 189.4 inches (4,810 mm) and the Bronco Sport at 173.4 inches (4,400 mm).

For now, Ford has made it clear that the electrified Bronco Basecamp is destined solely for China, with no plans to bring the model to North America.

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Xiaomi Boss Admits They Bought Teslas And Tore Them Down To Learn Every Secret

  • Xiaomi disassembled three Tesla Model Ys to study every single part.
  • Its CEO called the Model Y “very, very outstanding” during a live event.
  • YU7 orders passed 240,000 within 18 hours of launch, creating long waits.

Xiaomi’s rise to become one of China’s most popular car brands has been meteoric, due in large part to it already being a massive and hugely popular consumer electronics brand. Their SU7 sedan and YU7 SUV have already been proven to be very competitive, albeit with a few teething issues. Even so, Xiaomi’s leadership has been open about one thing in particular: the importance of learning directly from rivals like Tesla.

Read: Xiaomi’s Massive Waitlist Has CEO Suggesting Tesla to Frustrated Buyers

While recently speaking at an event in China, Xiaomi chief executive Lei Jun shared that earlier this year, the company purchased three Tesla Model Ys and proceeded to disassemble them and study every single component. It’s safe to assume Xiaomi likely carried out a similar exercise with the Model 3 when developing its first car, the SU7.

Borrowing From a Playbook

To be fair, this is hardly a unique approach to Xiaomi. Across the auto industry and beyond, tearing down competitors’ products is a long-standing method of benchmarking. Electronics firms routinely dissect smartphones and processors, while carmakers buy rivals’ vehicles, dismantle them to the last nut and bolt, and scrutinize everything from materials and software to production techniques.

 Xiaomi Boss Admits They Bought Teslas And Tore Them Down To Learn Every Secret
Weibo/Sago Soup/Piniluoshan

Even Ferrari has been drawn into similar speculation after a Xiaomi SU7 was recently spotted leaving the marque’s Maranello headquarters, prompting suggestions it could have been benchmarked against the brand’s first dedicated electric model.

Learning by Taking Apart

“We bought 3 Model Ys at the start of this year, disassembling the parts one by one, and studied every component, one at a time,” Lei told the crowd, according to Business Insider.

Throughout the presentation at the Beijing National Convention Center, Jun was complimentary of the Tesla Model Y, and showed a side-by-side comparison of the Tesla and the new YU7. Unlike many other industry CEOs, Xiaomi’s boss isn’t claiming that its latest model will wipe the floor with Elon Musk’s best-seller.

During the event, Lei told attendees, “if you don’t choose YU7, you can consider Model Y. I’m not criticizing the Model Y,” he added. “The Model Y is a very, very outstanding car.”

Too Much Demand, Not Enough Supply

Just last month, Lei took to social media to encourage those in the market for a new EV to look beyond Xiaomi and the YU7 as the technology giant wrestles with a massive backlog of orders. Indeed, within 18 hours of the YU7’s launch, Xiaomi had received roughly 240,000 orders, and some shoppers have been told they’ll need to wait over a year to take delivery.

Faced with this backlog, Lei took to social media to encourage shoppers to consider alternatives rather than sit idle in the queue. Among his suggestions were the Xpeng G7, Li Auto i8, and, once again, Tesla’s Model Y.

 Xiaomi Boss Admits They Bought Teslas And Tore Them Down To Learn Every Secret

China Just Put The Brakes On Its EV Export Boom

  • China will enforce EV export controls beginning January 1, 2026.
  • The move targets price wars and promotes healthy EV trade growth.
  • Mandatory customs inspections will apply under the new system.

Overseas buyers of Chinese electric cars may soon see tighter oversight of how these vehicles reach foreign markets. On Friday, Beijing confirmed it will introduce export controls on pure electric passenger cars, a move said to be driven by concerns at home over intense price competition and by global complaints abroad about a surge of cheap cars.

The government also wants stricter rules to guarantee proper after-sales support, meaning exporters will face greater scrutiny in the coming months and years.

The new licensing rules are scheduled to begin on January 1, 2026. From that date, the Commerce Ministry has confirmed that automakers and other authorized companies will need to apply for export licenses, much like the system already in place for hybrid and combustion-powered vehicles built in China and sold abroad. Officials are said to have grown increasingly frustrated with unauthorized exports sending cars overseas without the necessary after-sales support.

Read: Locked Out Of The US, Chinese Carmakers Are Taking Over The Middle East, Latin America, Africa And Asia

As reported by CBT News, poor service and missing support networks can leave customers stranded and undermine a brand’s reputation. The situation has also intensified price battles in several foreign markets, creating instability for local manufacturers.

According to the director of policy research at the China Automotive Technology Research Center Wu Songquan, it’s important for Chinese car brands to follow the lead of legacy carmakers and to standardize export processes and boost quality. It’s hoped this will build more long-term trust in vehicles exported from China elsewhere.

Exporting Powerhouse

The timing of these new measures is no accident. The move comes shortly after China officially established itself as the world’s largest car exporter, even surpassing Japan. And its growth shows no signs of stopping, as noted by the South China Morning Post.

 China Just Put The Brakes On Its EV Export Boom

The secretary general of the China Passenger Car Association, Cui Dongshu, believes that within five years the country could be exporting as many as 10 million vehicles to overseas markets annually. In China itself, local brands could be selling 30 million vehicles per year thanks to the nation’s huge population.

Massive Room To Grow

“There is still vast potential for market expansion in China’s less developed regions, such as mid-western districts and rural areas, where car ownership levels could gradually surpass those in metropolises like Beijing and Shanghai,” Cui noted.

For perspective, China currently has about one car per 1,000 people, a figure that underscores just how much space remains for growth. The contrast is stark when compared with Europe, where in 2020 there were 641 vehicles per 1,000 people, or the United States, where the number has been as high as 860.

 China Just Put The Brakes On Its EV Export Boom

Mazda’s Global $16,800 Chinese SUV Makes America’s Cheapest Cars Look Overpriced

  • Mazda EZ-60 starts at $16,800 in China, undercutting many U.S. economy cars.
  • Buyers can choose range-extended hybrid or full EV with 255 hp rear motor.
  • The all-electric Max trim offers 373 miles of CLTC range from 77.9 kWh pack.

Anyone shopping for an affordable new car in the United States might do a double take at Mazda’s latest announcement in China. The EZ-60, a midsize SUV offered with both pure electric and range-extended hybrid power, is priced at a level that makes it look like a bargain compared to even an entry-level Nissan Versa.

Announced earlier this year, the EZ-60 has been brought to life through Mazda’s joint venture partnership with Changan and will be sold overseas, where it will wear the CX-6e badge. In China, the Japanese automaker has confirmed it will have a starting price of just 119,900 yuan, or the equivalent of just $16,800, for the Base range-extender model.

Read: Mazda’s New Pure Electric SUV Has Spilled Its Secrets

Buyers wanting more can opt for the range-extended model in Pro and Max guise, starting at 129,900 yuan ($18,200) and 138,900 yuan ($19,500) respectively. Power comes from a 1.5-liter naturally aspirated four-cylinder that works solely as a generator to feed the 31.7 kWh battery, which in turn powers a rear-mounted electric motor rated at 255 hp.

The all-electric lineup mirrors the same three trims. Pricing starts at 139,900 yuan ($19,600) for the Base EV, stepping up to 149,900 yuan ($21,000) for the Pro and topping out at 160,900 yuan ($22,600) for the Max.

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EV Tech

Like the hybrid-assisted version, the pure EV uses a 255 hp motor driving the rear axle. Instead of a gasoline generator, it carries a 77.94 kWh lithium-iron phosphate battery pack that, according to Mazda, can deliver up to 600 km (373 miles) of range under the CLTC cycle.

While the exterior of the EZ-60 share some design cues with other Mazda models, the interior is unlike any of the brand’s cars sold in the West and sports a huge 26.5-inch 5K display doubling as the central infotainment screen, as well as a display for the passenger. There’s also a 100-inch augmented reality head-up display and cameras instead of traditional wing mirrors.

More: Mazda EZ-6 Electric Sedan With 808-Mile Range Extender Starts At $19,600 In China

Mazda has confirmed the EZ-60 will be exported to select global markets, including Europe where it will carry the CX-6e nameplate. Buyers in the United States, however, will have to admire it from afar, as there are no plans to offer it stateside. The SUV is Mazda’s second EV to be offered in China following the EZ-6 mid-size sedan launched late last year.

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China’s Car Brands Are Quietly Eating Europe’s Lunch

  • Last month, Chinese brands took 5.5 percent of the Euro market.
  • Their 43,500 unit sales total was up 121 percent from August ’24.
  • During August, Audi sold 41,300 units and Renault 37,800 in Europe.

Overall car sales in Europe grew by 5 percent to 790,000 last month, buoyed by continuing enthusiasm for electric cars across the continent. Plug-in hybrids saw particularly strong momentum, with registrations climbing to 83,900 in August, a 59 percent increase on the previous year that lifted their market share to 10.6 percent.

Related: Global Electric Car Sales Jumped 25 Percent While Canada Dropped By A Third

According to Jato Dynamics figures, battery-electric cars (BEVs) also posted gains, up 27 percent compared with August 2024, giving them a record 20.2 percent market share, up 3.6 percentage points year on year. That brings Europe’s total for fully electric registrations in 2025 to 1.54 million so far. Analysts caution, however, that the headline growth figures for BEVs may not tell the full story

Numbers With Caveats

“The data shows that there was strong demand for BEVs in August, however a 27 percent increase is less significant than it looks when you consider how widely they are being promoted across Europe,” said Felipe Munoz, Global Analyst at JATO Dynamics. “The new record market share for BEVs achieved last month has been partly distorted by the fact that Italy – typically a less enthusiastic adopter of BEVs – is usually quiet during August,” Munoz added.

Europe Car Sales
Aug ’24Aug ’25Diff.
Total752,847790,177+5.0%
BEV125,494159,746+27%
PHEV52,82083,872+59%
SUV408,561451,737+11%
Chinese brands19,70743,529+121%
Chinese-owned Western brands23,60119,613-17%
SWIPE

Jato Dynamics

China’s Growing Momentum

Yet Europe’s traditional manufacturers may find little comfort in these results. The bad news for Europe’s carmakers is that interest in Chinese brands is growing at an even faster rate, and it’s coming at the expense of some very big household names.

Audi shifted 41,300 units in August, and Renault moved 37,800. Both are major players in the market but were outmaneuvered by Chinese brands who registered 43,500 sales, up a massive 121 percent versus August 2024, Jato reports.

Granted, that ‘Chinese brands’ figure is made up of 40 different automakers, but Jato points out that 84 percent of the total was achieved by only five of them, namely MG, BYD, Jaecoo, Omoda and Leapmotor. Whichever way you cut it it’s bad news for Europe’s legacy brands, and is only going to get worse, though at least Stellantis’s deal with Leapmotor means it gets to celebrate the win.

Even on their own, the Chinese brands took some big scalps. MG registered more cars than Tesla and Fiat, BYD beat Suzuki and Jeep, and Jaecoo and Omoda outsold Alfa Romeo and Mitsubishi.

“European consumers are responding positively to the growing, competitive line-up from China’s car brands,” Jato analyst Felipe Munoz said. “It appears that these brands have successfully tackled the perception and awareness issues they have experienced.”

Hybrids, not just EVs

It’s not only in the EV segment that Chinese brands are making gains. They’re also doing great in the PHEV space, where they’re not hobbled by the same tariffs applied to their fully electric vehicles.

 China’s Car Brands Are Quietly Eating Europe’s Lunch
Jato

More than 11,000 Chinese-brand plug-ins were sold this August compared with only 779 in the same month last year, BYD is now the eighth most popular PHEV brand overall and the BYD Seal U, Jaecoo J7 and MG HS bagged three spots in the top 10 best-selling models list.

However, if you simply looked at the table of 10 most-registered models, you’d never guess how quickly China was moving forward. The list contains no names from the People’s Republic and continues to be dominated by Volkswagen and Renault.

The VW T-Roc (which has since been facelifted) was the region’s biggest seller, with the Dacia Sandero scooping second spot and Toyota’s Yaris Cross bagging third. Tesla’s updated Model Y was the best-selling EV, but its sales were down 37 percent and it was nowhere to be seen in the overall top 10 cars table.

 China’s Car Brands Are Quietly Eating Europe’s Lunch
Jato

Stellantis Finds Clever Way To Make EV Batteries Charge Faster And Run Longer

  • New tech embeds inverter and charger directly into the battery pack.
  • Stellantis says system improves energy efficiency by about 10 percent.
  • AC charging time drops to just six hours for the Peugeot E-3008 SUV.

While there’s little doubt that Chinese car manufacturers and battery companies are pushing EV technologies to a new level, that doesn’t mean legacy brands aren’t also looking for how they, too, can make electric vehicles better. Stellantis is one of them and thanks to a partnership with Saft, a subsidiary of energy giant TotalEnergies, it’s unveiled a promising new tech.

Read: Stellantis Gives China’s Leapmotor A Way To Dodge Europe’s Painful EV Tariffs

This prototype, based on the Peugeot E-3008, has been fitted with a new kind of battery spawned from IBIS, the collaborative initiative launched by Stellantis six years ago. Unlike most EVs, it embeds the inverter and charger functionalities directly into the battery. It supports AC and DC charging while also supplying the vehicle’s 12-volt architecture and auxiliary systems.

Power With Less Weight

The claimed gains are significant. Stellantis reports a 10 percent improvement in energy efficiency compared with a conventional pack of the same size. Peak power rises from 201 hp (150 kW) to 231 hp (172 kW), while the system sheds 88 lbs (40 kg) and frees up 17 liters of space.

Charging performance also benefits, with times reduced by as much as 15 percent. On a standard 7 kW AC charger, for example, a full recharge drops from 7 hours to around 6.

 Stellantis Finds Clever Way To Make EV Batteries Charge Faster And Run Longer

Still On Trial

Although the figures are promising, development is still in its early stages. Testing of the IBIS system is expanding to include on-road trials, and if progress stays on track, Stellantis suggests the system could appear in production vehicles before the decade closes.

As chief engineering and technology officer Ned Curic explains, the thinking is straightforward. “This project reflects our belief that simplification is innovation. By rethinking and simplifying the electric powertrain architecture, we are making it lighter, more efficient, and more cost-effective. These are the kinds of innovations that help us deliver better, more affordable EVs to our customers.”

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The World’s Most Famous Investor Made An Absolute Killing With BYD

  • Berkshire Hathaway fully divested its 17-year investment stake in BYD.
  • Warren Buffett first bought 225 million BYD shares in 2008 at HK$8 each.
  • BYD sold 4.27 million vehicles in 2024, including 1.76 million EVs.

In 2008, an audacious bet was placed on a little-known Chinese automaker, one that most outside the country had never heard of. Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway invested HK$1.8 billion ($231.7 million) in BYD, a company still in its early days and largely unproven on the global stage. Seventeen years later, the gamble has paid off handsomely, and Buffett has decided the time is right to walk away.

Read: BYD Changes Course After Realizing Not Everyone Is Ready For EVs

A quarterly filing from Berkshire Hathaway Energy confirms that the firm has now sold its entire stake in BYD. The exit didn’t happen overnight. Beginning in 2022, the company quietly trimmed its holdings across 15 separate rounds, each documented in financial reports. Before the sell-off began in late summer of that year, Berkshire’s stake was valued at roughly $7.7 billion.

From Penny Stock To Powerhouse

When Buffet first purchased 225 million shares in BYD at the insistence of investment partner Charlie Munger, the company’s shares were trading at just HK$8. According to CNBC, BYD’s shares have surged by 3,890% since Buffet’s investment. It’s unclear exactly how much money Berkshire Hathaway has made through its BYD investments, but it’s certainly billions of dollars.

After the sale, BYD’s general manager for branding and public relations, Li Yunfei, thanked Buffet and Berkshire Hathaway for the investment. At its peak, the investment company owned roughly 10 percent of the Chinese automaker.

News of the divestment, immediately weighed on the market, with BYD shares slipping 3.4 percent and landing among the weakest performers on a Hong Kong index of Chinese companies.

 The World’s Most Famous Investor Made An Absolute Killing With BYD

“In stock investments, buying and selling is a normal part of the process,” Li said. “We appreciate the recognition from Munger and Buffett of BYD, as well as their investment, support and partnership over the past 17 years. We appreciate all long-term investments.”

Last year, BYD sold 4.27 million vehicles around the world, consisting of 1.76 million battery-electric vehicles and 2.49 million plug-in hybrids. This year, it had hoped to deliver as many as 5.5 million vehicles, but due to increased competition, as well as a slowdown in its home market, it has cut this forecast down to 4.6 million.

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China’s EV Fire Fix Shoots Battery Into Traffic And Makes It Their Problem

  • Chinese firm tests battery ejection tech to prevent fires in electric cars.
  • The demo sparked debate over safety risks to traffic and pedestrians.
  • Chery iCar 03T used in trial, though automaker denies any involvement.

EV fires, notoriously difficult to extinguish once they start, remain one of the toughest challenges for carmakers. Engineers continue racing to design battery packs resilient enough to survive crashes without igniting. In China, however, a very different approach has been showcased: a high-speed ejection system that literally launches the pack away like a projectile from the vehicle during an emergency.

If that sounds less like a safety breakthrough and more like and accident waiting to happen, you’re getting the idea. And yes, it really is that stupid.

Battery Launcher

The unusual demonstration was captured in a video that went viral on Chinese social media. The clip shows a large battery module violently shooting out of the side of an SUV before smoke appears. Safety workers quickly smothered the pack with a special blanket after it landed in a designated area with pillows.

More: See What Happens When Two Cars Hit A Chinese EV At 60KM/H In Triple Crash Test

According to Chinese reports, the system works in much the same way as an airbag. If sensors detect a thermal event in the pack, the system can trigger an ejection in less than a second, flinging the battery between 3–6 meters (10–20 feet) away from the vehicle. The idea is to protect occupants from a potential fire or even an explosion.

Good Luck Everyone Else

Of course, as many commenters pointed out, “somewhere else” could just mean straight into another moving car, onto pedestrians, or across live traffic. A battery pack that weighs hundreds of kilos is about as far from harmless as a projectile can get. And in the kind of heavy crash where fires are most likely, the car’s structure could crumple enough to jam the system anyway, leaving you with both the fire and the deadweight still on board.

Who Staged the Demo?

Here’s where it gets interesting. While we couldn’t find official information, markers on the SUV suggest the test was organized by the China Automotive Collision Repair & Technology Research Center. Stage graphics show it took place during the “Power Battery Launch Technology Demonstration and Exchange Meeting” on September 19, 2025.

More: Chinese Government’s Hunt For Online Car Slander Has Begun

The prototype appears to be based on the iCar 03T, though the automaker quickly distanced itself from the experiment. Posting on its Chinese social media accounts, the Chery-owned brand stated: “This has nothing to do with iCAR, please be rational.” Reports also claimed that Joyson Group may have collaborated on the project, but the company has since denied involvement, according to Epoch Times.

 China’s EV Fire Fix Shoots Battery Into Traffic And Makes It Their Problem

For all the spectacle, the so-called missile-style ejection system is a dead end. Lobbing a half-ton battery into traffic is not a safety feature, it’s a liability with wings. And in the real-world crashes where it might matter, the mechanism itself would likely be wrecked before it ever fired.

 China’s EV Fire Fix Shoots Battery Into Traffic And Makes It Their Problem

Screenshots Weibo

BMW Is Cranking Out Cars “Like Pretzels” And Says Even China Can’t Keep Up

  • BMW plans to launch 40 models in 2 years with help from AI-driven tools.
  • AI cuts coding time drastically, completing tasks in minutes not days.
  • Development teams shrink to 1,000 people per car, boosting efficiency.

In recent years, Chinese carmakers have pushed boundaries not only with cutting-edge in-car tech and advanced powertrains but also with the blistering pace at which they bring new models to market. Yet according to BMW’s development director, Joachim Post, the German brand has now reached a point where it can move even faster than its rivals in China.

The brand’s Neue Klasse transformation is well underway. Not only is this new era bringing with it a radically different design philosophy, but newly launched EVs have a new platform, better motors, and more advanced batteries. As part of its overhaul, BMW is promising to release 40 new models and updates in the next two years.

Faster Than Fast

“Who can do that?,” Post asked while speaking with Handelsblatt. “Our colleagues in China can’t do that either. A single car can always be developed quite quickly. But that wasn’t the approach with the iX3 and the New Class. We have invested a lot of time and energy here to enable a major technology boost for the entire model range. Because we will only be successful if we integrate the technologies now developed into the entire model range.”

Read: Is BMW Teasing The Next i4 With This Mysterious Sedan?

With that foundation laid, the pace is now accelerating. “We can now bring cars onto the market the way you bake pretzels, as they say in Bavaria,” Post said. “Nobody will imitate us so quickly what we plan to do in the next two years. And that’s why I say, what we’re doing now is more than China Speed.”

 BMW Is Cranking Out Cars “Like Pretzels” And Says Even China Can’t Keep Up
A prototype of the upcoming BMW i3 electric sedan.

Earlier this month, Audi said it was going “China speed” with the next-generation TT, announcing that it will hit the market just 30 months after being signed off. Evidently, German manufacturers know they must cut development times if they want to keep up in a rapidly evolving market.

AI In The Workshop

According to Post, one of the reasons BMW will be able to launch more models faster than ever before is because of AI. He explained that the technology “helps us massively,” especially in coding and software development, where tasks that once filled an entire day can now be completed in minutes. Moving forward, development times could be slashed further.

It isn’t just about saving time. According to Post, far fewer people will be needed for each new car. “Only 1,000 people will work on a new car,” he predicted, compared with the significantly larger teams required in the past.

“We’ve needed significantly more manpower in the past,” he said. “Now we can leverage much greater efficiency potential. And AI is helping us massively in this regard, for example, with coding. We’re gaining incredible speed in software development, and with it, we’re gaining additional speed in the entire development process. 

Knowledge That Stays

AI is also helping BMW retain valuable expertise. In the past, when an experienced engineer left the company, much of their know-how left with them. Now, Post explained, BMW can train AI systems to capture and preserve that knowledge, keeping it within the company and reducing the risk of competitors gaining an edge.

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China Recalling Over A Third Of All Xiaomi SU7s After Deadly Crash

  • Chinese regulators flagged flaws in the SU7’s driver-assistance system.
  • Affected vehicles were manufactured from February 2024 to August 2025.
  • Xiaomi says that the issue will be fixed via an over-the-air software update.

More than 115,000 examples of the hugely popular Xiaomi SU7 are being recalled in China due concerns with its driver-assistance systems. The move follows a high-profile crash about six months ago in which three college students were killed when their SU7 struck a concrete divider at 97 km/h (60 mph) while its Navigate on Autopilot system was active.

More: First Fatal Xiaomi SU7 Crash Sparks Questions About Self-Driving Tech And Locked Doors

China’s State Administration for Market Regulation has revealed that the driver-assistance system used by the SU7 has “insufficient recognition capability and may not adequately detect and warn drivers in certain scenarios,” as required by Level 2 or Level 2+ systems. It went on to specify that if the highway pilot assisted driving feature is enabled, it may not provide adequate warnings of performance in extreme scenarios.

Scale of the Recall

A total of 116,887 examples of the SU7 are being recalled, all of which were manufactured between February 2024 and August 2025. This accounts for roughly 38 percent of the 305,055 SU7s that had been sold across China as of July since the car’s early 2024 launch.

Xiaomi has confirmed that the fault will be corrected via an over-the-air software update, avoiding the need for physical servicing.

 China Recalling Over A Third Of All Xiaomi SU7s After Deadly Crash

This recall coincides with the rollout of new safety standards in China for cars equipped with Level 2 driver-assistance systems. These regulations, which set stricter performance requirements, will come into effect in 2027.

Fatal March Crash

The most serious incident linked to the SU7 occurred in March on the Dezhou-Shangrao Expressway. Chinese media reported that at the time, the car was allegedly traveling at 116 km/h (72 mph) with the Navigate on Autopilot engaged.

The system was said to have flagged an “obstacle ahead” and initiated braking while approaching a construction zone. The driver intervened, steering left and applying moderate braking, then gradually turning back to the right. Moments later, the vehicle collided with a concrete divider and caught fire. All three occupants lost their lives.

Read: Chinese Smartphone Giant’s European EV Push Might Spell Trouble For Tesla

“A recall due to a faulty driver-assistance system may deter some Chinese consumers from buying Xiaomi cars,” said Chen Jinzhu, CEO of consultancy Shanghai Mingliang Auto Service, in comments to the South China Morning Post. “But the recall also shows Xiaomi’s commitment and confidence in resolving the issues.”

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Audi’s Chinese Brand Scored 10,000 Pre-Orders In Just 30 Minutes

  • The China-only Audi E5 Sportback starts at 235,900 yuan or around $33,000.
  • Range spans 384 to 402 miles depending on trim and battery configuration.
  • Power output ranges from 295 hp to 776 hp with RWD or AWD drivetrains.

Not too long ago, Audi made the decision to launch a stand-alone EV brand in China under the name AUDI, written in all caps. While it seemed like a questionable move at the time, it appears to be paying off, judging by the demand for its first model, the new E5 Sportback.

According to the company, when pre-orders for the E5 opened on August 18, more than 10,000 reservations rolled in within half an hour. Those kinds of numbers are common for Chinese startups, but not for long-established manufacturers. Just as important as the tally itself is the message it sends: there’s no better way to create FOMO than to show how many people have already locked in an order for this EV, complete with some German heritage.

Read: Of Course, The New AUDI E5 EV Is Ridiculously Cheap In China

Of course, the figures themselves don’t carry much weight, since they’re not binding or backed by non-refundable deposits. It’s possible that a fair share of those who placed early reservations for the E5 could cancel before the car actually reaches their driveway.

With that being said, it shouldn’t come as much of a surprise as to why the E5 has proven to be popular. As we confirmed last month, the entry-level Pioneer version starts at just 235,900 yuan or around $33,100. For the money, shoppers get a 76 kWh battery pack, a 295 hp rear motor, and a claimed range of 384 miles (618 km).

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Other models include the 402 hp, rear-wheel drive Pioneer Plus with a 100 kWh battery and starting at 269,900 yuan ($38,000) and the Pioneer Plus with an 83 kWh pack and dual motors delivering 518 hp, priced from the same 269,900 yuan ($38,000). The range is then topped out by the Flagship Quattro with a 100 kWh battery, 402 miles (647 km) of range, and dual motors with 776 hp. It starts at just 319,900 yuan ($45,000).

The cabin of the AUDI E5 Sportback is unlike any Audi model sold in the West, and instead far more similar to other EVs in China. It includes a 59-inch screen stretching across the entire dashboard, digital wing mirrors, soft-touch leather and Alcantara, and wireless phone chargers.

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Dreame’s Bugatti Rip-Off Debuts In 2027 With EV And Range Extender Options, But Definitely No W16

  • China’s Dreame reveals new render of its Bugatti-like EV ahead of CES debut.
  • Four-door sedan is due to be shown in concept form at CES in Las Vegas in January.
  • Sister brand Starry Sky Auto developing Rolls-Royce and Bentley-inspired SUVs.

Chinese vacuum maker Dreame Technology is doubling down on its promise to build an EV that’s the spitting image of a Bugatti Chiron. The company’s car division, Dreame Auto, has just released another image of its creation, and like the handful of renders shown last week, this one also appears to have been generated, at least in part, with the help of AI.

More: Chinese Vacuum Giant Aims To Beat Bugatti With The World’s Fastest Hypercar

More importantly, company insiders have also shared some technical details, as well as news of a second luxury brand aiming to rival the likes of Bentley and Rolls-Royce.

Spot the Differences

The single new image, still a rendering, rather than a photo of a real vehicle, shows the car that’s apparently (and unashamedly) codenamed “Dreame Bugatti,” with its doors open this time. We already knew it had four doors, but now we can see the rear pair are rear hinged, that all four open upwards like a McLaren’s, and that there’s no B-pillar.

Close comparison of the old and new pictures reveals some detail differences. The new images of the white model show two vents in the hood, one behind each headlight, and the grille is slightly broader and less rounded, looking slightly less Bugatti-like, and more Jaguar-ish. The changes are, however, unlikely to placate Bugatti. The company never replied when we asked it for comment last week, but we doubt it’s thrilled at the news.

Both pure EV and range-extender hybrid versions will be offered when the finished car enters production in 2027 at a site next door to Tesla’s Gigafactory in Berlin, according to Weixin, which cites a company insider it spoke to. But we’ll get our first look at a physical car in January next year when the company brings a pre-production prototype to CES – yes, that CES in Las Vegas.

 Dreame’s Bugatti Rip-Off Debuts In 2027 With EV And Range Extender Options, But Definitely No W16

Second Luxury Brand Modeled After Bentley and Rolls-Royce

The company’s automotive ambitions stretch further than a Bugatti lookalike. The same insider told the Chinese outlet that Dreame Tech is splitting its car operations into two divisions. Dream Auto is focused exclusively on building the Chiron-a-like, which founder Yu Hao hopes will go on to break hypercar speed records. The other division we learned about today, Starry Sky Auto, has been benchmarking cars such as the Rolls Royce Cullinan and various Bentley models in preparation for the development of four vehicles built from the same basic components.

Citing a recent internal communication meeting, the Chinese outlet reports that the company’s founder told his team the Starry Sky Auto premium models will be built on wheelbases of 3.2 meters (126 inches) and 3.3 meters (130 inches) long. He also “put forward the requirements that the former should be larger in length, width, and height than the Li Auto L9 and M9, and the latter should have a domineering and tough appearance, with all dimensions no smaller than those of the Cullinan.”

According to the report, Dreame Auto has ” assembled a cross-industry team covering R&D, manufacturing, and quality control. The team includes core R&D personnel from its original smart hardware business, as well as experts from traditional vehicle manufacturing.”

Budget Meets Ambition

With prices allegedly ranging from $38,000 to $83,000, Starry Sky Auto’s models will certainly not be in Bentley and Rolls Royce territory, and are instead designed to take on EVs from smartphone-maker Xiaomi, whose expansion from electronics giant to automaker Dreame wants to replicate.

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Dreame Auto

China’s Hunt For Online Car Slander Has Begun

  • China launches three-month crackdown on auto industry online disinformation.
  • Carmakers like MG and BYD offer huge rewards for tips on malicious accounts.
  • Officials say influencers with millions of followers spread damaging anti-EV claims.

Chinese automakers have never been shy about defending their reputations, and over the years they’ve taken aim at social media users they believe are spreading damaging claims about their vehicles.

Sometimes those accounts are run by ordinary users, while in other cases competitors themselves are suspected of stoking the attacks. Now the Chinese government is stepping in, with a three-month crackdown on online disinformation that it says targets the auto industry.

Collisions Online And Off

Disinformation about many Chinese car manufacturers has become a common sight across local social media platforms, including Douyin, which is the Chinese version of TikTok. Sometimes, its even rival car companies themselves that use social media to target their competitors.

Nikkei Asia reports that, in July, Li Auto shared a video to social media that showed a collision between one of its SUVs and a truck from Dongfeng Liuzhou Motor. While the SUV escaped with very little damage, the cab of the truck was destroyed. Unsurprisingly, Dongfeng took issue with how its truck was depicted, prompting an apology from Li Auto.

Earlier this month, China’s Ministry of Industry and Information Technology said its new enforcement campaign will target malicious disinformation about the auto industry online. It added that steps will be taken against “illegal business practices, exaggerated or false advertising and slander.”

 China’s Hunt For Online Car Slander Has Begun

Carmakers Fight Back

It’s not just the government that is fighting back against disinformation, but also the automakers themselves. For example, MG is offering rewards of up to 5 million yuan ($703,000) for information about malicious social media accounts. Similarly, BYD is offering rewards of between 50,000 yuan ($7,000) and 5 million yuan ($703,000) for similar information.

Read: EVs Are So Cheap In China Now Even Xi’s Worried

The reach of some social media accounts cannot be overstated. In 2023, a Douyin influencer posted videos ridiculing the drivers of one particular EV startup in China. While this account was suspended by June 2024, it reportedly had as many as 5.4 million followers, and the damage was arguably already done.

 China’s Hunt For Online Car Slander Has Begun

Two Of Xpeng’s Futuristic Autonomous Aircraft Just Crashed Into Each Other Mid-Air

  • Xpeng’s eVTOL aircraft collided during a rehearsal flight in Changchun, China.
  • One aircraft landed safely while the other crashed and caught fire afterward.
  • No fatalities were reported in the crash just before the public air show.

In addition to building some of China’s most advanced electric cars, Xpeng has been quietly pursuing something far more ambitious: an electric vertical take-off and landing (eVTOL) aircraft. The project has been in development for over a decade, and the company is even constructing a purpose-built factory to produce them.

That long-term vision, however, hit turbulence this week when two of its aircraft reportedly collided and crashed at the Changchun Air Show.

The two aircraft involved in the incident are understood to be the same models designed to fold up and slot into the rear of the six-wheeled Land Aircraft Carrier. Each uses a six-rotor layout with propellers and arms that can fold away, and they are built to operate either under manual control or in autonomous flight mode.

Folding Wings and Six Rotors

 Two Of Xpeng’s Futuristic Autonomous Aircraft Just Crashed Into Each Other Mid-Air

It remains unclear whether the test flight was being conducted under manual control or via the autonomous system. What is known is that the accident happened during a rehearsal ahead of the public show’s opening on Friday. One passenger is reported to have been injured, though not seriously, according to Guancha.

Read: Xpeng’s $280,000 AeroHT Mothership Launches 2-Seater Drone From Its Boot

In a statement issued to CNEVPost, Xpeng said that the two aircraft were participating in a formation drill but collided after flying too close to each other. Fortunately, one of the aircraft landed safely, but the other sustained more significant damage and caught fire after it fell from the sky.

Ambitious Production Goals

Despite the setback, Xpeng wants to start production of the six-wheeled AeroHT ‘mothership’ and the eVTOL for paying customers by 2026. Prices will start at approximately 2 million yuan or about $281,000 at current exchange rates, and it’s said that the company has already received thousands of orders for the pricey recreational vehicles. The eVTOL can reportedly operate at up to 500 meters.

Both vehicles will be built at a 180,000-square-meter site in Guangzhou’s Development Zone. The new factory is designed to handle up to 10,000 units per year, underscoring the scale of Xpeng’s ambitions in taking mobility from the road to the sky.

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Global Electric Car Sales Jumped 25 Percent While Canada Dropped By A Third

  • This year, an estimated 12.5 million BEVs and PHEVs have been sold globally.
  • Sales in North America have increased just 6 percent compared to last year.
  • Dragging North America down has been a decline in sales across Canada.

The automotive industry’s transition to electrification has been a lot rockier than many had predicted due to shifting customer preferences, ever-changing regulatory hurdles, and market-specific demands, forcing carmakers to respond. While the growth in sales of electrified vehicles has slowed somewhat, new data reveals they continue to gain popularity, accounting for a larger slice of the overall market.

Through the first eight months of this year, an estimated 12.5 million battery-electric vehicles and plug-in hybrid vehicles have found homes around the world. This represents a significant 25 percent spike over the year prior and has been led by surging demand in most important markets. However, North America is lagging behind.

A Continent Out Of Step

Read: The World Is Racing Toward EVs While America Barely Leaves The Driveway

According to data from Rho Motion, this year a total of 1.3 million BEVs and PHEVs have been sold in North America, which is just a 6 percent increase from last year. By comparison, sales in Europe are up 31 percent, those in China have increased 25 percent, and sales across the rest of the world have jumped 44 percent to roughly 1 million units.

Canada is dragging the rest of North America down. After the iZEV rebate was paused earlier in the year, Canadian BEV and PHEV sales have fallen one-third year-to-date. By comparison, sales are up in the United States and experienced a particular surge in August due to the impending end of the federal EV tax credit on September 30.

 Global Electric Car Sales Jumped 25 Percent While Canada Dropped By A Third
Rho Motion

Slowing Momentum

In August alone, global sales of BEVs and PHEVs increased by 15 percent from the year prior, but this rate was the lowest jump since January. In total, 1.7 million BEV and PHEVs were sold in August, representing a 5 percent jump from July.

China, the world’s largest EV market, illustrates the slowdown. Sales still climbed 6 percent compared with August 2024, but the rise fell short of expectations. Last year’s numbers were inflated by unusual surges in July and August, when China broadened its trade-in scheme for new energy vehicles, making this year’s performance look softer by comparison.

 Global Electric Car Sales Jumped 25 Percent While Canada Dropped By A Third

Lead image: Stefan Baldauf & Guido ten Brink

This Is Buick’s New Flagship Electra Sedan And You Can’t Have It

  • Buick has launched the Electra L7 in China under its new Electra sub-brand.
  • It rides on the new Xiao Yao architecture, offering BEV and EREV options.
  • The EREV version has 338 hp of power and 870 miles of combined range.

Update: GM has unveiled the production version of the China-exclusive Buick Electra L7 sedan, releasing full powertrain specs. This story has been updated with new details and images.

While Buick’s presence in the US is now all about crossovers and SUVs, the brand is taking a different approach in China, where the traditional sedan still has a place. The all-new Electra L7 joins Buick’s portfolio in the world’s largest automotive market, bringing modern styling, a high-tech interior, and electrified powertrains.

More: Buick’s Electric Crossover Just Got A Lot Better In China

Electra is Buick’s sub-brand for new energy vehicles. It was formally announced in April 2025, with three concepts: a sedan, an SUV, and a minivan. The Electra L7 is the production version of the sedan, which evolves from the 2024 Electra L concept shown the previous year.

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From Concept To Production

The model retains much of the design language introduced in the concept, though a few features have been streamlined for production. The lighting signature at both ends has been reworked, with more practical LED graphics. Furthermore, the sleek, flush door handles and traditional side mirrors replace some of the show car’s more experimental elements, bringing it closer to real-world usability.

Buick highlights its wing-shaped “Galaxy” headlights and turbine-style alloy wheels as standout features. The L7 wears a fastback silhouette focused on aerodynamics and measuring 5,032 mm (198.1 in) long, 1,952 mm (76.9 in) wide, and 1,500 mm (59.1 in) tall. A 3,000 mm (118.1 in) wheelbase gives it a spacious footprint, putting it slightly longer than the Tesla Model S and Mercedes-Benz EQE, though shorter than the BMW i5.

A Minimalist and Techy Interior

Inside, the L7 offers a minimalist but premium-looking cabin anchored by a floating island-style dashboard. It features two screens: a driver display and a tablet-style infotainment unit on the center console. Physical controls are limited to a few buttons on the lower console and steering wheel, which still retains multifunction stalks, including for the transmission control.

Luxury touches include Nappa leather upholstery and four-zone “suspension” seats, with the front passenger seat offering a dual 120-degree zero-gravity function. A 27-speaker Buick Sound system integrates headrest speakers and active noise cancellation.

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The Electra L7 also gets a massive 50-inch augmented reality head-up display, and an array of AI-driven features. All of this runs on Qualcomm’s 8775 chip, which supports high-end infotainment and connectivity. Driver assistance tech will come from Chinese tech company Momenta, which has developed a suite of sophisticated ADAS capabilities using LiDAR.

Platform With Options

The sedan is just one of six new energy models Buick plans to launch in the next year, likely alongside production versions of Electra’s SUV and minivan concepts. All of them will be built on Buick’s Xiao Yao architecture, a flexible platform designed specifically for China. These underpinnings are compatible with fully electric, plug-in hybrid, and range-extender powertrains, in FWD, RWD, and AWD layouts.

More: Buick’s New Sedan Concept Rivals The S-Class In Size

At launch, the Electra L7 will feature a range-extender powertrain. It’s powered by a turbocharged 1.5-liter engine from SAIC, producing 154 hp (115 kW / 156 PS) and 230 Nm of torque. The engine doesn’t drive the wheels directly; instead, it acts solely as a generator to recharge the 40.2 kWh lithium-iron phosphate battery pack.

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Propulsion comes from a 238 hp (252 kW / 343 PS) electric motor that Buick says delivers performance comparable to a 3.0-liter turbocharged V6. In EREV form, the Electra L7 accelerates from 0–100 km/h (0–62 mph) in 5.9 seconds and reaches a top speed of 200 km/h (124 mph).

More impressively, the Electra L7 delivers a combined range of 1,400 km (870 miles), including up to 302 km (188 miles) of EV-only driving under the (generous) CLTC cycle. Despite its performance, efficiency remains a highlight, with average fuel consumption rated at just 0.5 liters per 100 km (470 mpg).

In the near future, Buick plans to offer a fully electric version of the Electra L7. This variant will feature a CATL-supplied battery and a 900V electrical architecture, enabling support for ultra-fast charging. According to GM’s estimates, the system will be capable of adding up to 350 km (218 miles) of range in just 10 minutes, significantly reducing downtime during long trips.

Pricing and Availability

 This Is Buick’s New Flagship Electra Sedan And You Can’t Have It

GM positions the new Buick Electra L7 as a “300,000-class” vehicle, suggesting a price near ¥300,000 ($41,800). Final pricing will be announced on September 28 when pre-sales open, with deliveries starting in Q4 2025.

As with other Electra-branded models, the L7 is likely to stay exclusive to China, so a US launch isn’t in the cards. Production will take place at the factory of the SAIC-GM joint venture in Wuhan.

Buick has sold over 10 million vehicles in China since 1998. Its local lineup offers a much wider choice of models compared to that in the US, including four SUVs, four sedans, one hatchback, and a range of minivans.

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