BEIJING — Covid-related restrictions have increased production costs for Chinese electric car start-up WM Motor, even as existing chip and battery shortages are driving up costs, CEO Freeman Shen told CNBC.
«Adding all these things together, this industry is a fast-growing industry, but the cost part of the equation is also going to be a challenge,» Shen, also founder and chairman of WM Motor, said Wednesday.
Sales of new energy vehicles — which include battery-only and hybrid-powered cars — more than doubled last year in China, the world's largest automobile market. The country has become a hotbed for electric car start-ups and a launch pad for many traditional auto giants making the shift to electric.
China quickly controlled the local spread of the coronavirus in 2020 by imposing swift lockdowns on cities and neighborhoods. But after the emergence of the highly transmissible omicron variant, some analysts started to question whether the costs of the zero-Covid policy now outweigh the benefits.
The impact is already being felt by factories. A Chinese ministry overseeing manufacturing said this month the lockdowns would be a drag on industrial production in the first quarter.
Shen laid out the impact of Covid-related restrictions on his start-up:
«So, all these things were killing us,» Shen told CNBC.
Automakers around the world have cut production due to a shortage of semiconductors. Geopolitical tensions and overwhelming demand for chips in the wake of the pandemic contributed to a shortfall in supply that has lasted for more than a year.
Shen said he expects the chip shortage to improve in the second half of this year, based on conversations with his start-up's 11 chip suppliers.
However, he pointed to another
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