BYD Song L electric cars at the 21st Changchun International Automobile Expo in Changchun, Jilin province, China, on July 17, 2024.
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SINGAPORE — Chinese automakers BYD, Leapmotor, and Xiaomi have raced past their annual delivery targets a month ahead of schedule, underscoring their rapid growth and strong market demand as the year comes to a close.
Electric vehicle juggernaut BYD delivered 504,003 passenger vehicles in November, up from last month’s 500,526. Its cumulative deliveries for passenger cars stand at 3,740,930, exceeding its initial full-year target of 3.6 million deliveries.
Meanwhile, Stellantis-backed Leapmotor saw 40,169 deliveries in November, up 5.22% from the previous month and 117% year on year. The company has delivered 251,207 cars year-to-date, surpassing its 250,000 annual delivery target.
Xiaomi, likewise, achieved the feat of surpassing its annual target of 100,000 deliveries midway through November. The company launched its first car, the SU7, in March this year.
For the full month of November, the Chinese phonemaker company delivered more than 20,000 cars for the second consecutive month this year. Xiaomi has revised its target to 130,000 deliveries by the end of the year.
Chinese electric carmaker Zeekr said Sunday it delivered 27,011 cars in November, beating the previous month’s record by 7.83%, and increasing by 106% year on year.
This month’s deliveries brings its full year’s deliveries to 194,933 — only slightly short of its full-year delivery target of 230,000 vehicles.
The Geely-backed automaker began deliveries of its new five-seater SUV Zeekr Mix on Oct. 23.
Xpeng also achieved an all-time best with 30,895 deliveries in November, up 29% from the previous month.
The deliveries included the company’s mass-market car, Mona M03, which exceeded 10,000 deliveries for the third consecutive month. Xpeng launched Mona M03 in late August with prices starting at $16,812, while Tesla’s cheapest car, the Model 3, starts at 231,900 yuan ($31,897).
Xpeng’s November deliveries also included more than 7,000 deliveries of the P7+, which launched Nov. 7 and received 31,528 orders by midnight that day.
Premium brand Niodelivered 20,575 cars in November, up 28.9% year on year. Deliveries included 5,082 vehicles from its lower-priced brand Onvo, which was launched in September.
In a Nov. 20 earnings call, the company said it aimed to deliver between 72,000 and 75,000 cars in the fourth quarter. That means Nio has to deliver at least 30,449 cars in December to meet the minimum target.
Nio will also launch its Firefly brand on Dec. 21, CEO William Li said in the same call. Co-founder and president Qin Lihong confirmed to local media last month that the car would be purely electric, refuting local media claims of a potential hybrid model.
Nio’s full-year delivery target for 2024, derived from quarterly guidance, ranges from 218,000 to 227,000 deliveries. Per CNBC’s calculations, Nio has delivered a total of 190,832 cars year-to-date.
The company shared plans to double electric car deliveries next year in the earnings call, with a target of 20,000 Onvo cars per month by March 2025.
Li Auto, whose cars mostly come with a fuel tank to extend the battery’s driving range, delivered 48,740 cars in November, down 5.25% from October’s deliveries. As of end-November, the company delivered 441,995 cars out of its annual goal of 480,000.
The company previously aimed to deliver 800,000 cars for the full year, but cut its target in June.
Huawei-backed Aito did not disclose its November deliveries, but announced on Nov. 27 that it had delivered over 180,000 units of the M7.
And amid the intensifying price war in China, American automaker Teslacut prices by 10,000 yuan for its Model Y through Dec. 31. With the discount, the Model Y now retails at 239,900 yuan.
General Motors may be better known for its lineup of full-size trucks and SUVs, but a recently published patent shows the legacy automaker has at least considered something much smaller and nimbler: an electric motorcycle.
The patent, which surfaced earlier this year in a report by Visordown, outlines a lightweight, scrambler-style electric two-wheeler that has set off a fresh wave of speculation about GM’s potential interest in electric motorcycles or micromobility.
The design in the patent filing shows a slim electric motorcycle with a flat bench seat, upright handlebars, and dual-sport tires, suggesting a utility-forward ride meant for light off-road or potentially even mixed urban use (if it were homologated for street use).
The rear hub motor and what appears to be a central battery housing point to a simple, low-maintenance drivetrain, potentially aimed at the commuter or recreational rider market.
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The overall look is somewhere between a moped and a small electric dirt bike, reminiscent of models like the Sur Ron Light Bee or Talaria Sting, though slightly more street-looking with less of a focus on pure dirt.
While the patent doesn’t include performance specs or firm production plans, it’s the clearest signal yet that GM is at least experimenting with the idea of higher-powered two-wheeled EVs. And there is some precedent. GM previously dipped a toe into the micromobility waters with the Ariv electric bicycle project, and more recently partnered with Recon Power Bikes to release a Hummer-branded fat tire e-bike.
Both efforts showed that GM sees value in offering electric alternatives beyond the traditional four-wheel format, even if the Ariv program quietly ended after a short run.
GM previously experimented with an in-house electric bicycle known as the ARĪV, though it was killed off soon after
Whether this patent leads to a full-fledged GM electric motorcycle remains to be seen. It’s entirely possible the design is a concept or technology demo with no intention of hitting the market. But there are other possibilities too. GM could develop a motorcycle under one of its existing sub-brands, create a new division specifically for electric powersports, or partner with an existing two-wheeler manufacturer to license or co-develop the platform.
The timing wouldn’t be far-fetched. Despite bumpy roads in the larger flagship electric motorcycle market, lightweight electric motorcycles are booming, with companies like Ryvid targeting urban riders looking for clean, compact alternatives to traditional gasoline-powered bikes.
At the same time, a growing number of younger consumers are bypassing car ownership entirely, instead looking toward e-bikes, scooters, and low-speed electric motorcycles for daily transport. A small, stylish, and affordable GM electric motorcycle could hit that sweet spot.
Of course, turning a patent drawing into a real-world vehicle is a big leap, and GM’s own e-bike history is a reminder that two-wheeled projects can be short-lived. Still, it’s hard to ignore the symbolism of this move: even one of America’s largest automakers is exploring what personal electric transportation looks like when you cut the vehicle in half. GM might not be ready to ditch its trucks, but it clearly hasn’t ruled out hopping on a bike.
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The electric restomod experts at Lunaz have turned their talents towards the classic Rolls-Royce Phantom V limousine – and the result is exactly the kind of smooth, quiet, and luxurious ride RR’s founders would have built.
Rolls-Royce’ founders dedicated their engineering talents to developing cars that were smooth, quiet, and adequately powerful – and they spared no expense. The company Charles Rolls and Henry Royce founded would eventually go on to develop some of the most powerful and celebrated combustion engines of the twentieth century … but the car they wanted to build? It was electric.
“The electric car is perfectly noiseless and clean,” Charles Rolls told The Motor-Car Journal, all the way back in April of 1900. (!) “There is no smell or vibration, and they should become very useful when fixed charging stations can be arranged. But for now, I do not anticipate that they will be very serviceable – at least for many years to come.”
Well, 125 years seems like “many” to – and the talented craftspeople and engineers at Lunaz seem to agree. Meet the Lunaz Rolls-Royce Phantom V limousine.
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It’s glorious
Rolls-Royce Phantom V; via Lunaz.
Lunaz says it’s true to Rolls’ vision “down to the smallest, most indulgent detail.” To that end, the company re-trims the modern heated and ventilated seats in fine leathers, hand-cut and stitched to the buyers’ specifications. In the rear, the center console can be ordered with a built-in cigar humidor, a cocktail bar, or some other custom-spec, lockable storage lined in suede and polished walnut (translation: guns and drugs, probably).
When reimagining the Rolls-Royce Phantom V, (we) started by understanding the essence of its original design. Every component and dynamic was scrutinized to identify where thoughtful innovation could truly elevate the experience. The result is a harmonious blend of modern advancements and original mastery, unlocking new levels of performance, reliability and refinement while honoring Rolls-Royce’ classic soul.
Like the classic Bentley S2 Continental the company revealed in 2023, the big electric Roller is equipped with an 80 kWh battery pack sending electrons to a proprietary Lunaz drivetrain featuring 400 hp worth of electric motors delivering a silky-smooth 530 lb-ft of torque, good for a 0-100 km/h (62 mph) swoosh in about seven seconds. Of course, why you’d ever ask your driver to perform such plebian stunts is simply beyond me.
The transformation and restoration took more than 5,500 man-hours to complete, and involve more than 11,000 new or reconditioned components at a cost of more than £1 million (about $1.35 million US). If you place your order today, you should get yours in 18-24 months.
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Fortescue has taken the wraps off a prototype of its proposed “Infinity Train” electric locomotive, making the 1,100 km (about 685 miles) trip from Perth to the Pilbara and marking a major milestone in the decarbonization of the company’s heavy haul operations.
Co-developed with the locomotive experts at Downer Group, Fortescue revealed its concept for a battery electric “Infinity Train” back in March of 2022. At the time, the company promised a “world’s first” iron ore train capable of fully charging its batteries through regenerative braking. The two companies claimed the clever technology would create a self-sustaining, zero-emission rail system powered entirely by the force of gravity during the train’s loaded downhill travels.
This week, the concept went from the drawing board to the real world, completing an 1,100 km trip across Australia and proving itself to be up to the task of handling the grueling demands of Fortescue’s massive mining operations.
“We’re thrilled to see our battery electric locomotive prototype arrive in the Pilbara,” said Ellie Coates, CEO of Fortescue Zero. She added that the achievement, using zero fossil fuels, “represent(s) a major step in Fortescue’s journey to Real Zero.”
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The Fortescue Infinity Train uses the energy produced by slowing the loaded train on downhill sections of the company’s 385 mile private, heavy-haul rail network to recharge its battery systems. That energy is enough to bring the unloaded train back to the mine, eliminating the need for external charging infrastructure or additional renewable energy sources, making the train almost entirely self-sufficient.
Fortescue says the deployment of the Infinity Train concept at its mines will eliminate more than 82 million liters of diesel fuel consumption (about 21 million gallons, which ChatGPT tells me amounts to about 235,200 tons of CO₂ emissions).
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