China-EU EV tariff agreement seen cutting shipments but boosting profitability

The European Commission and China have agreed to replace anti-subsidy tariffs on Chinese electric vehicles with minimum price undertakings. This deal aims to prevent price wars and enhance profitability for mainland carmakers like BYD. Analysts expect it to curb sales volumes while fostering brand reputation in Europe.

Assemblers of Chinese pure-electric cars from BYD to Leapmotor will avoid a brutal discount war after European authorities accepted price undertakings to replace punitive anti-subsidy tariffs of up to 35.3 per cent.

The EU levied tariffs of 7.8 per cent to 35.3 per cent on Chinese-made pure electric cars in late 2024 following more than a year of anti-subsidy investigations. According to their announcement on Monday, the European Commission, the executive body of the EU, and Beijing reached an agreement to remove the tariffs. Instead, Chinese EV builders agreed to sell their cars at minimum prices on the continent.

Minimum prices would technically temper sales volume, particularly for low-priced small electric cars, Deutsche Bank analyst Wang Bin said in a research note. But he added that the policy shift would have a positive impact on China’s EV king BYD, which posted a nearly fourfold delivery jump in Europe last year.

The commission outlined how Chinese exporters could submit price undertaking offers, which it said must be “adequate to eliminate the injurious effects of the subsidies and provide equivalent effect to duties”. It encouraged exporters to include commitments such as annual shipment volumes and planned future investments in the EU.

The agreement on price floors will allow mainland carmakers to avoid price wars and nurture brand reputation, analysts say. While shipments may decrease, profitability is expected to improve.

Related Articles

Illustration of BYD EVs surging past Tesla on a futuristic highway, featuring sales triumph charts and global EV growth projections for a news article on China's EV dominance.
Image generated by AI

BYD's 2025 EV Triumph: Industry Reactions and Market Outlook

Reported by AI Image generated by AI

Building on BYD's milestone of surpassing Tesla with 2.26 million BEV sales in 2025 versus Tesla's 1.64 million deliveries, industry leaders highlight China's dominance while global EV growth accelerates toward 40-50% market share by 2030.

Chinese carmakers sold more than 2.6 million electric vehicles to overseas markets last year, up 104 percent from the previous year, according to the China Association of Automobile Manufacturers. As the world's leading EV producer, China benefits from low production costs and advanced battery technologies that make its vehicles highly competitive globally. Yet, export growth is now facing a slowdown.

Reported by AI

India is planning to reduce import duties on cars from the European Union to 40 percent from the current 110 percent as part of negotiations for a free trade agreement. This move could make luxury European vehicles more affordable in the Indian market. Brands like Volkswagen, Mercedes-Benz, and BMW stand to benefit significantly.

In the latest European Automobile Manufacturers’ Association data for November 2025—building on Tesla's reported 34.2% EU registrations decline—BYD surged ahead with 16,158 units (+235.2% YoY), surpassing Tesla's 12,130. Tesla clings to a year-to-date EU lead of ~18,300 units, but BYD's rapid gains, Tesla's slumps in the US and China, and BYD's UK expansion underscore intensifying competition.

Reported by AI

Following initial reports last week, the EU Commission has detailed its proposal to replace the 2035 total ban on new petrol and diesel cars with a 90% emissions reduction requirement. Hybrids remain viable via offsets like biofuels, prompting support from Christian Democrats but criticism from Social Democrats and Volvo.

Chinese automaker BYD has surpassed Tesla to become the world's largest seller of electric vehicles in 2025, with sales of 2.26 million units compared to Tesla's 1.64 million deliveries. Tesla's figures mark a second consecutive annual decline of 9 percent, driven by the end of U.S. tax credits and intensifying global competition. Despite the sales drop, Tesla's stock rose about 11 percent for the year amid optimism over future technologies like robotaxis.

Reported by AI

The CEOs of Volkswagen and Stellantis have called for a "Made in Europe" strategy in an op-ed to bolster electric vehicle production in the EU. They seek to relax EU climate rules in favor of domestic manufacturing and introduce financial incentives like a CO₂ bonus. The aim is to secure investments in Europe and address geopolitical challenges.

 

 

 

This website uses cookies

We use cookies for analytics to improve our site. Read our privacy policy for more information.
Decline