Recent Updates

 

04/03/2024 12:00 AM

Government to investigate whether headlights are too bright

 

04/03/2024 12:00 AM

Global car makers contemplate exit from China

 

04/03/2024 12:00 AM

Porsche K1: Electric seven-seat luxury SUV shows off radical design

 

04/02/2024 12:00 PM

BYD Seagull could come to UK in brand's affordable EV push

 

04/02/2024 12:00 PM

New Alpine A290: electric hot hatch will be revealed on 13 June

 

04/02/2024 12:00 AM

Toyota Land Cruiser

 

04/02/2024 12:00 AM

Jeep Renegade

 

04/01/2024 12:00 PM

Electric Renault Clio due as family-friendly 5 sibling

 

04/01/2024 12:00 PM

How to clamp down on roadside rubbish

 

04/01/2024 12:00 PM

Best used cars for £50,000 and under

<<    101   102   103   104   105   >>

EV, Hybrid, Hydrogen, Solar & more 21st century mobility!

< Prev    of 5618   Next >
BYD Seagull could come to UK in brand's affordable EV push
Tuesday, Apr 02, 2024 12:00 PM
BYD Seagull Chinese firm is "keen to have" Dacia Spring rival in UK, and sees suitable space in its line-up

BYD’s UK bosses are keen for the company to offer the low-cost BYD Seagull electric car to British buyers.

No decision has yet been taken however on if and when the 3.8-metre-long Seagull would launch in the UK, but if it does it would likely be the cheapest electric car on sale in the UK.

In China, it is priced from the equivalent of £8000, a price at which BYD is understood to make the car profitably and still offer a range close to 200 miles.

BYD’s UK marketing boss Mark Blundell said he was “keen to have it” when asked about the potential UK launch of the Seagull and said there was a clear space below the BYD Dolphin hatchback in the range for it. It is sold as the Dolphin Mini in some markets.

Blundell said it was BYD’s strategy to “make electric cars accessible to all” and keen pricing was part of that. “EVs shouldn’t just be for well-off people…[we need to] have affordable EVs in the range, and need accessible EVs, not just £50, 60, 70,000 ones”.

Blundell was speaking at an event to mark the one-year anniversary of BYD’s launch in the UK. The firm has not set any targets for UK sales or growth but the firm, which sold more electric cars than any other car maker globally last year, including Tesla, is well backed, well funded and ambitious - and growth akin to that achieved by MG in the UK is conceivable over the next few years.

In the medium term, Blundell said he’d like to see BYD “established as a credible brand, with an established infrastructure and dealer network and to be part of the landscape” in the UK. “We need coverage in key markets and robust aftersales.”

The firm plans to go from 21 to 60 dealers in the UK by the summer, giving good geographic coverage across England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland. Blundell was the first staff member in the UK on BYD’s car side - it has been selling buses in the UK for 10 years now, too - but the firm has around 40 employees now and will be adding 100 or so more in the next few months.

BYD operates a wholesale retail model and keeps a good stock of cars to be able to get them to buyers quickly; Blundell quoted a typical two-week lead time to get cars to buyers after orders.

Part of its ability to keep costs so low is by producing so many parts in-house and owning so much of the logistics and supply chain; one example given by Blundell is that the firm has recently commissioned its own cargo ship that holds 7000 cars.

“We control what we can control,” he said. “We’re switched onto supply chain and logistics and ‘build our own’“ when it comes to components.

That policy will also extend to the firm’s new car European factory in Hungary that will be on stream next year, although Blundell said it was not yet decided which models would be built there.

The firm has launched the BYD Atto 3, BYD Dolphin and BYD Seal electric cars in the UK to date, and will soon add the BYD Seal U SUV as its first hybrid here. Selling hybrids is part of BYD’s plan to be a “mainstream volume brand”, said Blundell.

The hi-tech Yangwang U8 SUV remains “a work in progress” for a UK launch, but doesn’t seem imminent, instead being recently brought here to demonstrate BYD’s technical capabilities.

Blundell said the firm hadn’t seen any negative impact from the tensions between the UK and China at a government level from customers. There had been no discussion on the impact of any potential tariffs that might also be imposed on Chinese cars in the future.

< Prev    of 5618   Next >
Leave a Comment
* Name
* Email (will not be published)
*
Click on me to change image  * Enter verification code (Click on the CAPTCHA to refresh the image!)
* - Reqiured fields