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        Cars

        China may lead in electric vehicle race

        By Christine Yee Fields (China Daily)
        Updated: 2011-01-20 10:01
        Large Medium Small

        NEW YORK - China could lead the race to roll out electric vehicles and will deploy new transport technologies faster than the United States, according to a report by Accenture that compares the two countries.

        But the United States could lead a global biotechnology-based agricultural revolution that will generate a greater range of biofuel breakthroughs.

        The report, The US and China: the race to disruptive transport technologies, concludes that China's State-backed focus on electric vehicles (EVs), its domestic supplies of lithium and current battery production capability will give it a competitive advantage over the US in EVs. The market-led approach of the US will result in a more gradual development of new technologies. However, the US will be better placed to create innovation across many platforms (advanced combustion engines, electric and advanced biofuels) that can be integrated into the existing fuel-supply infrastructure.

        The rise of new fuel technologies and greater fuel efficiency will give both countries greater energy independence. The reduction in gasoline demand in the US could be up to 22 billion gallons a year by 2030 if vehicle miles traveled (VMT) remained roughly the same as it is today, according to an Accenture scenario analysis. This could cut crude oil imports by 1 billion barrels per year, a 34 percent reduction from the 3.3 billion barrels imported in 2009. China, which imports over half of its petroleum demand, could reduce imports of crude oil by 676 million barrels a year by 2020.

        The rise of new fuels will have a negative impact on the US refining industry. Increased fuel-efficiency standards and the blending of biofuels could replace more than 30 percent of US gasoline and diesel demand by 2030 compared with 2010 if VMT stayed the same. The reduction in gasoline demand will affect US refineries currently configured to maximize gasoline production and favor those refineries that can more easily adjust their product mix.

        But in China there will be no losers. Even though the country intends that alternative energy will account for 30 percent of transport fuels by 2020, Accenture estimated that car ownership will almost triple between now and 2020 to approximately 200 million, creating growth for the biofuel, EV and oil industries.

        "The US already has a competitive advantage in agriculture and conditions that make it the home of completely new technologies, but China's policy decisiveness will allow it to scale specific new transport technologies more rapidly," said Melissa Stark, global leader of the Clean-Energy Practice at Accenture. "However, these respective strengths will not guarantee long-term competitiveness, and policymakers and investors in both countries will need to put in place major structural changes to ensure their industries adapt and can compete globally," she added

        New fuels will make the US refining industry less competitive in the face of falling gasoline demand and crude oil imports. This structural change in fuel demand will favor larger, more complex refineries with lower marginal costs and production flexibility to make different product slates including "fuel switching" or the ability to incrementally increase diesel production if demand dictates.

        Disparate federal funding will disadvantage the US. The government has committed billions of dollars across many technologies, but the Chinese government has committed approximately $15 billion to EV deployment for the next 10 years.

        The EV industry in the US faces strong competition from China, Japan and South Korea, countries which account for 60 percent of US rechargeable-battery imports. The US will depend almost entirely on lithium imports from Asia and Latin America (China supplies a fifth of the world's batteries and its reserves of lithium can support 450 million vehicles).

        China's progress in new fuels could be constrained by supply-chain bottlenecks, such as feedstock availability for cellulosic ethanol and high battery-unit costs. Financial incentives will need to be more precisely targeted to these specific parts of the value chain.

        China's investment and policy-driven approach will need to be supplemented by more consumer-oriented business models and innovation that builds on a greater understanding of consumer demand. China must supplement its advantages in rapid implementation with greater investment in core-technology innovation. More transparent IP processes, talent strategy and incentive policies are required to attract funding for the new-fuel industries.

        Special Coverage:
        China's EV industry leaps forward
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        "The US has to manage the transition of its legacy infrastructure to one that will accommodate new fuels to ensure that this transition occurs at the lowest possible investment cost," said Accenture's Melissa Stark. "The US does not have a blank piece of paper while China, in many ways, does. China's challenge is to balance implementation with innovation if it is to compete in the long-term race for new transport technologies. Both countries need to leverage their respective advantages."

        The report also provides recommendations for oil companies and electricity utilities to exploit new opportunities. For oil companies, these include reviewing operating models to create closer links with agriculture to secure supplies of biofuel feedstock, and the disposal of marginal assets that retard competitiveness. As China's oil companies expand globally, they will need to improve their merger and acquisition strategies and post-merger implementation.

        Accenture also recommends that electricity utilities proactively manage the opportunities and challenges presented by the electrification of transport. Given uncertain consumer demand, utilities will have to improve their understanding of consumer preferences for EVs to mitigate the high risks associated with infrastructure investments. Electricity distributors should also increase low-voltage energy storage investments to mitigate the volatile demand of EV charging and the intermittent supply of renewable energy. Proactive management on this level will further position utilities to capture market opportunities related to electrification of transport.

        Reuters

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