In Levi Tillemann’s book, The Great Race: The Global Quest for the Car of the Future, he tells a story of Ford’s then-chief technology officer hearing an investment pitch in 2007 for an improved internal combustion engine. Afterward, the executive told the young inventor that Ford’s powertrain road map had been written and it “will end up in battery land in about 15 years.”
Fifteen years later, based on the amount of attention and investment received by electric vehicles compared with internal combustion vehicles in the industry and some symbolic events favoring EVs, the former Ford chief technology officer may not be off by much. By the end of 2022, the U.S. government passed favorable legislation to promote EVs under the Inflation Reduction Act.
Ahead on the transition curve, China phased out its 10-year-old nationwide subsidy program to manufacturers as EVs are now deemed competitive with internal combustion vehicles in total cost of ownership and desirability. And this year started with the news that during the first two months, Honda, a manufacturer born out of high-quality internal combustion engine production, found its sales in China dropping more than 30 percent from the same period in 2022.
In contrast, electric-vehicle-only BYD, an also-ran domestic automaker in 2018 when I last visited Shenzhen, China, became one of the dominant players in the passenger vehicle market in that country in 2022. We don’t need to read the tea leaves to guess where the trend is heading. Battery land appears to be the case at least in the world’s largest passenger vehicle market.