Highlights
- China convened a major NEV symposium targeting four priorities: restoring competition, strengthening innovation in chips/software, stimulating consumption, and improving regulatory governance to address strategic vulnerabilities.
- Beijing is pushing localization of automotive chips and foundational software to reduce foreign technology dependence, potentially reshaping global EV supply chain dynamics and export control exposure.
- A dual-track strategy is emerging: tightening domestic market discipline through pricing oversight and payment cycles while enabling outward expansion via trade-ins, financing, and export infrastructure support.
Rare Earth Exchanges™ tracks three agencies and one coordinated signal. China’s Ministry of Industry and Information Technology (MIIT), National Development and Reform Commission (NDRC), and State Administration for Market Regulation (SAMR) convened a March 17 symposium with new energy vehicle (NEV) manufacturers to align policy across the sector. According to People’s Daily, officials outlined four priorities: 1) restoring orderly competition, 2) strengthening innovation capacity, 3) stimulating consumption, and 4)improving regulatory governance.
For U.S. and European stakeholders, this is not routine signaling. It reflects a deliberate move to stabilize pricing, tighten market discipline, and reinforce industrial policy execution as China’s EV sector scales globally.
Chips and Software: Targeting Strategic Weak Points
Closing the Gaps in the Stack
The most consequential directive is Beijing’s push to accelerate breakthroughs in automotive chips and foundational software—areas where China remains partially dependent on foreign technology, particularly the United States. Officials called for a new round of “high-quality development” initiatives across key industrial chains, including scaling applications and iterating product performance.
According to a Rare Earth Exchanges assessment, this has clear global implications. If China succeeds in localizing these components, it could reduce exposure to export controls and further compress cost structures, strengthening the competitiveness of Chinese automakers in global markets. It’s about industrial leverage and China’s moves to decouple as much as possible from the West on that particular front.
Autonomous Driving: Policy Alignment for Scale
From Pilot to Production
The meeting also emphasized faster progress in autonomous driving, including optimizing pilot access frameworks and accelerating the development of technical and regulatory standards to support commercialization.
This signals a shift from experimentation to scale. China is positioning not just to lead in EV production volume, but to define standards and deployment pathways for intelligent vehicles, integrating regulation, manufacturing, and technology development into a unified strategy.
Market Discipline and Demand Expansion
Order at Home, Growth Abroad
Regulators are committed to tightening oversight of pricing practices, cost structures, and auto finance while continuing their long-term crackdown on irregular online market practices. Companies are also being pressed to honor a 60-day payment cycle to address liquidity stress across the supply chain.
At the same time, Beijing is working to expand demand through vehicle trade-in programs, increased deployment of electric heavy-duty trucks, improved access to financing, and stronger logistics support for exports and overseas expansion.
The approach is dual-track: impose discipline domestically while enabling outward growth. An effort in part to transcend overproduction crises, a lack of sufficient domestic consumer demand—themes we have touched on frequently.
Bottom Line: Industrial Policy Matures
China’s EV sector is entering a more mature phase—one defined by tighter governance, targeted technological independence, and coordinated global expansion. For Western automakers and suppliers, the signal is clear: China is actively addressing remaining vulnerabilities in chips and software while building a more structured, export-oriented EV ecosystem.
We note this while, in parallel, automakers in the West and Japan seek to accelerate ex-China supply chains. Where this is all headed, we cannot be certain—but notable trends are understood.
Disclaimer: This report is based on information published by People’s Daily and disseminated via the China Rare Earth Industry Association, both state-affiliated media sources. The information has not been independently verified and should be interpreted with appropriate caution.
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