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EU to vote on Chinese electric vehicle tariffs, Tesla vs China: 7 EV reads you missed

From D-Day looming for China’s exporters to an escalating battle for supremacy in autonomous driving, here are seven EV stories you may have missed

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Robots perform welding work on vehicles for Voyah, a division of Chinese state-owned carmaker Dongfeng Motor Corporation, in Wuhan, Hubei province, in April. Photo: Xinhua
We have put together stories from our coverage on electric and new energy vehicles from the past two weeks to help you stay informed. If you would like to see more of our reporting, please consider subscribing.

1. D-Day looms for China’s exporters as EU moves towards EV tariffs vote

October 4 is a date that cannot come soon enough for European Union bureaucrats, but one the Chinese government desperately wants to avert. The EU’s 27 member states are slated to hold a crucial vote on whether to sign punitive tariffs of up to 35.3 per cent on Chinese-made electric vehicles into law for five years.

2. Malaysia must stay ‘open’ in EV push amid global trade tensions: minister

Malaysia must navigate global trade tensions carefully as it seeks to sustain competition in its electric-vehicle sector through incentives for local manufacturers and lure investment, according to its Investment, Trade and Industry Minister Tengku Zafrul Aziz.

3. EV maker Hozon says Hong Kong IPO is progressing, seeks funds to drive exports

Hozon New Energy Automobile said some aspects of its stock listing plan in Hong Kong are progressing faster than expected, aided by better market sentiment and the company’s urgency in selling more electric vehicles (EV) in overseas markets.

Hozon founder Fang Yunzhou standing next to a Neta X SUV in Sha Tin, Hong Kong on September 22. Photo: May Tse
Hozon founder Fang Yunzhou standing next to a Neta X SUV in Sha Tin, Hong Kong on September 22. Photo: May Tse
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