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- China Set To Introduce World-First EV Efficiency Standards Next Year

Starting Jan 1, 2026, all new pure-electric passenger cars in China must meet mandatory energy efficiency standards. This is the first time the country is enforcing legal limits on EV electricity consumption, replacing the old voluntary guidelines.
It is officially called Energy Consumption Limits for Electric Vehicles Part 1 Passenger Cars. Unlike the old recommended rules, this one has real legal force, meaning automakers must comply or face consequences.
The new standard sets clear electricity usage limits based on vehicle weight and design. For example, a two-tonne electric car can now use no more than 15.1 kWh per 100 km.

Officials say that after making technical upgrades, cars of the same battery size could drive about 7% further on a full charge thanks to better efficiency.
The rules are about 11% stricter than the old guidelines and include flexibility for different driving styles and special vehicle types.
It’s important to note that this applies only to pure-electric cars while plug-in hybrids or extended-range models aren’t included. Efficiency improvements come from smarter engineering, not bigger batteries, so automakers will need to focus on system-level upgrades to meet the new targets.

These rules also tie directly to financial incentives. To qualify for purchase tax exemptions in 2026 and 2027, vehicles must meet the new energy limits.
Cars already on the current tax-exemption list that comply will continue to qualify, while those that don’t may lose their tax benefits. Plug-in hybrids and extended-range cars also face stricter thresholds, including longer minimum electric-only ranges to earn incentives.
Chinese authorities, including the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology, the Ministry of Finance, and the State Taxation Administration, have been pushing for this move for a while, linking energy efficiency standards directly with fiscal rewards to drive innovation.
For big Chinese automakers like BYD and Geely, the new rules mostly formalize targets that many of their recent EVs already meet.

Cars that comply can continue production with little change, while non-compliant models may need upgrades or risk being dropped from production and losing tax perks.
Heavier two-tonne-class vehicles are most affected, so expect automakers to prioritize efficiency improvements across all models to stay competitive.
Source: CarNewsChina
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Anis
Previously in banking and e commerce before she realized nothing makes her happier than a revving engine and gleaming tyres........

