A report by IDTechEx found that China’s electric
two-wheeler sector, despite still being the largest EV market in the world with
some 29.66 million units produced in 2020, is no longer seeing the explosive
growth of the past.
According to the market analyst, the country’s
two-wheeler segment grew at a rate of 24% compound annual growth rate from 2002
until 2016, when it saw a peak of around 32 million units. Since then, the
numbers have been going down.
Among the reasons for the decline, IDTechEx points
out that the rise of the passenger car, the ultimate mobility preference as
consumer purchasing power has increased, is the most important one.
But China’s reliance on lead-acid batteries has also
played a role in the decline because up to 80% of toxic waste from such devices
from the electric vehicle market was unaccounted for until 2019 when the
government brought in a new standard.
This led electric two-wheelers to both close
loopholes compromising safety and transition away from lead-acid
batteries.
IDTechEx says that the share of Li-ion batteries in
two-wheelers has been increasing from 1% in 2010 to close to 20% in 2020, a
trend that its experts expect to continue to at least 50% in 2025 as Li-ion
production increases and costs fall.
“Moreover, an interesting mix of chemistries is
helping to facilitate this transition. The usual suspects —
lithium-iron-phosphate (LFP) and lithium-nickel-manganese-cobalt oxide (NMC) —
are supplied, but unlike any other electric vehicle market, variants of
lithium-manganese oxide (LMO), which have a good balance of performance and
cost, play a large role,” the document notes.
Going back to the market decline, IDTechEx mentions
that the final reason that explains the trend is the ban on electric bikes
imposed by some tier-1 cities after riders started illegally disconnecting
motor controllers to be able to reach speeds of up to 40kmph with two-wheelers
weighing over 70 kilograms, which were legally considered bicycles.
“Since the market’s origins, China’s regulation has
limited electric two-wheeler speeds, but in practice, this was not enforced,”
the report reads. “The result was a massive wave of safety incidents and
fatalities.”
Such incidents prompted new regulations that brought
in measures for motor controller tamper resistance.
Mining.com