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posted by janrinok on Wednesday April 17 2024, @08:48AM   Printer-friendly

Arthur T Knackerbracket has processed the following story:

Electric vehicles may become a new front in America's tech war with China after a US senator called for Washington DC to block Chinese-made EVs to protect domestic industries and national security.

Sherrod Brown, senator for Ohio and chair of the Senate Banking Committee, penned a letter to President Biden, claiming "there are currently no Chinese EVs for sale in the United States, and we must keep it that way."

He warned that "Chinese EVs, highly subsidized by the Chinese government, could decimate our domestic automakers, harm American workers, and give China access to sensitive personal data," insisting the US government must ban Chinese-made EVs as soon as possible, calling it "a matter of economic and national security."

The move comes as the dispute between the two economic superpowers over technology rumbles on, with the US last week sanctioning four more Chinese companies, claiming they were involved with providing chips for accelerating AI to China's military and intelligence users.

Among those added to the Entity List maintained by the US Department of Commerce was Sitonholy (Tianjin) Co, understood to be one of the largest distribution channels for Nvidia's datacenter products in China, thus cutting off supplies of Nvidia GPUs to many Chinese companies.

[...] The number of Chinese cars purchased by US customers is understood to be very low as these are subject to an extra 25 percent tariff on top of the regular 2.5 percent import duty that DC applies to imported vehicles.

However, Senator Brown notes in his letter that BYD already sells an electric hatchback named the "Seagull" for the equivalent of less than $10,000. This compares with the $28,140 that has been reported as the starting price of the current cheapest electric car available in the US, the 2024 Nissan LEAF S.

There is also a national security twist as Senator Brown claims that data collected by the sensors and cameras in Chinese EVs could pose a threat. "China does not allow American-made electric vehicles near their official buildings. To allow their vehicles freedom to travel throughout the United States would be foolish and highly dangerous," he stated.

Senator Brown also claims in his letter that nearly 20 percent of all electric vehicles sold in Europe during 2023 were made in China, citing this as a cautionary example.

The European Commission last year announced an investigation into subsidies in the Chinese EV industry, but there are said to be misgivings in Germany and elsewhere that a ban on Chinese EVs could backfire, with Beijing retaliating by locking Western carmakers out of the lucrative China market entirely.


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  • (Score: 3, Insightful) by JoeMerchant on Wednesday April 17 2024, @07:25PM

    by JoeMerchant (3937) on Wednesday April 17 2024, @07:25PM (#1353354)

    No doubt China or any other hostile state could use significant disruption of their network connected products as a military advantage (example: immediately prior to the Russian invasion of Ukraine US advisors were rumored to be actively mitigating anticipated Russian cyber attacks on the Ukrainian train network, preventing mass strandings (and casualties) of civilians cut off from evacuation during the invasion.)

    However, I wouldn't call significant disruption of thousands or millions of citizens' (both civilian and military) vehicles as a prelude to an attack, that step is an attack in and of itself.

    Meanwhile, how many remote interfaces to US (and other) water, power, sewage, transport infrastructure, etc. industrial control systems are "secured" with passwords like "Assword1"?

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