Chinese-built electric vehicles pose the greatest risk to Europe's automakers and could cost them 7 billion euros ($7.7 billion) a year in lost profits by 2030 unless policymakers take action, according to an Allianz Trade report.
Policymakers need to meet the challenge with reciprocal tariffs on imported cars from China, do more to develop EV battery materials and technologies, and also allow Chinese carmakers to build cars in Europe, according to the report released on Tuesday by the unit of German insurer Allianz.
The study echoes a warning by Stellantis CEO Carlos Tavares at this year's CES that the European auto industry faces a "terrible fight" over with Chinese importers.
Europe's car companies face a dual threat from the prospect of falling sales of their own vehicles in China, where local EV makers have been growing market share, and from rising sales of imported Chinese EVs -- built in China by Chinese or Western automakers.
Global automakers have pledged to make a comeback in China with a large number of EVs in a fast-moving market where the pressure to cut prices is getting more intense.
A crowded market for all-electric SUVs in China is putting pressure on local automakers to export more vehicles to Europe. Chinese EV imports could cost the European Union over 24 billion euros in economic output in 2030, or 0.15 percent of the bloc's gross domestic product, Allianz Trade said.