Tesla debuted a significantly cheaper version of its locally built Model Y crossover in China as deliveries for June slipped amid concern a string of negative publicity may have soured consumer sentiment toward the EV pioneer.
Wholesale shipments of China-made Teslas fell 0.9 percent last month to 33,155 from 33,463 in May, data from China’s Passenger Car Association showed Thursday. May’s figure was a surge of almost 30 percent from April. The wholesale figures may not necessarily reflect the level of retail demand Tesla fields directly versus via traditional dealerships.
The so-called standard-range version of the Model Y crossover starts from 276,000 yuan ($42,600) after government subsidies. Tesla began taking orders Thursday, according to its website. That is about 20 percent less than the original longer-range Model Y, which can run for 369 miles (594 km) on a single charge.
This latest version, which is available in Hong Kong but has not been sold in China before, can run for 326 miles. Because it’s priced under 300,000 yuan, it is eligible for a particular state new-energy vehicle subsidy. Its price is only 10 percent higher than Tesla’s most-basic China-made Model 3 sedan and deliveries will start as soon as next month.
“China has the world-leading new-energy market and is the first market outside the U.S. that Tesla owns a locally produced product,” Tesla said in a statement. The company will “continue its investment in China and carry on its corporate mission of accelerating the world’s transition to sustainable energy and helping to boost the realization of a carbon-neutral target.”
Tesla, which counts China as its second-most-important market after the U.S., has a history of repeatedly lowering the price of its cars, particularly around the start of a new quarter, in order to boost sales. However Thursday’s launch is especially telling considering it comes after months of bad press in the world’s biggest electric-car market.
This year alone, Tesla has battled everything from an angry driver protest that went viral at the Shanghai auto show in April to online criticism about its perceived arrogance and lack of customer service. The California-based company has also weathered other issues that have seen its cars banned from some military complexes over concern the vehicles’ in-built cameras may be collecting sensitive data. Tesla immediately moved to reassure authorities, saying any data collected in China is stored locally.
The latest setback came last month when the Chinese government ordered that almost all the cars Tesla has sold in the nation -- more than 285,000 of them -- be fixed to address a safety issue. The State Administration for Market Regulation said vehicles’ Autopilot systems could be activated automatically, potentially leading to crashes from sudden acceleration.
Export breakdown
Tesla’s Model Y, a bigger, sportier car, is a make that CEO Elon Musk has said has the potential to outsell all other vehicles the company manufactures. In June, China’s Passenger Car Association forecast increased interest in roomier cars, particularly in the seven-seater category, as government rules allow parents to have more children.
“Chinese consumers love SUVs and crossovers,” Tu Le, the managing director of Beijing-based consultancy Sino Auto Insights said after Tesla recorded a brisk jump in Model Y sales in May. “I think the Model Y is going to do really well toward the end of this year.”
Sales of the longer-range Model Y, which starts from around 347,900 yuan, rose to 12,785 in May from 5,520 in April.
By way of comparison, Nio’s ES6 SUV, which competes head-to-head with the Model Y, starts from 358,000 yuan. Tesla’s lower price for the standard range will put pressure not only on local competitors but also foreign manufacturers including Volkswagen Group, which has launched similar models in the same price range.
Of Tesla’s 33,155 deliveries in June, 5,017 of the cars were exported while 28,138 went into local sales channels. That export figure is down sharply from the previous month of May when 11,527 vehicles were exported from Tesla’s Shanghai factory, mainly to markets in Europe.
Retail passenger vehicle deliveries overall in China declined 5.3 percent year-on-year in June. For the month, they were down 3.5 percent. New-energy vehicle retail sales, which includes plug-in hybrids, increased 170 percent year-on-year to 223,000 units in June, the PCA data show.
For the first half, new-energy vehicle wholesale deliveries totaled 1.09 million vehicles while retail sales were around 1 million.
“It was beyond our imagination that half-year NEV sales would top 1 million units,” PCA Secretary General Cui Dongshu said during a briefing Thursday. “The 2.4-million-unit forecast for 2021 NEV sales that we made in May seems conservative now.”
Cui added that Tesla’s launch of a crossover for less than 300,000 yuan was “of great significance to the development of new-energy vehicles” considering a core part of the cars’ acceptance is lower prices.