Chinese
E.V.s Deliver a Message at the Global Climate Summit
The
climate-friendly fleet assembled to shuttle delegations to the gathering in
Brazil sent a clear signal: China is making inroads in Latin America.
Ana
Ionova
By Ana
Ionova
Reporting
from the U.N. Climate Change Conference in Belém, Brazil
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/11/06/climate/lula-cop30-byd-electric-vehicle.html
Published
Nov. 6, 2025
Updated
Nov. 7, 2025
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The
climate-friendly cars were carrying President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva of
Brazil and his team. Mr. Lula is host of this year’s U.N. Climate Change
Conference, a gathering of dozens of world leaders in the Amazonian city of
Belém.
The
vehicle that carried the president himself was a Chevrolet, but it was the odd
one out in a fleet of Chinese electric and hybrid cars assembled to shuttle
delegations to the summit’s opening on Thursday, where they began negotiations
on ways to cut emissions of planet-warming gases and slow down climate change.
“We need to
embrace a new way of life, a more just, resilient and low-carbon development
model,” Mr. Lula said in his opening remarks on Thursday.
That
Brazil chose Chinese electric vehicles as the official means of transporting
most other world leaders sent a clear signal to many: In its quest to transform
its roads and its economy, Latin America’s largest nation would be mostly
turning to China.
The
gesture highlighted the spectacular inroads that Chinese climate technologies
have made in Brazil. The lone presidential Chevrolet also stood in stark
contrast to the absence of the United States at this year’s talks, known as
COP30, which President Trump is not attending.
“The world
is moving on, even without U.S. political and technological leadership,” said
Scott Kennedy, a senior adviser at the Center for Strategic and International
Studies, a Washington research organization. “With these cars, Brazil is
signaling that it has other options.”
Electric
vehicles are widely seen as crucial in the fight against climate change because
they reduce the world’s reliance on fossil fuels and eliminate emissions of
carbon dioxide, the primary heat-trapping gas that’s warming Earth’s
atmosphere.
While
European and American automakers have struggled to pivot to making vehicles
powered by electricity, China has gained ground by offering electric cars built
with advanced technologies at lower prices than those of competitors like
Tesla. This has made Chinese cars especially attractive in developing countries
with less spending power.
China
also controls the supply chains for the critical minerals that are needed to
make the powerful batteries that go into these cars. The country is vying with
United States for access to these strategic minerals, which are considered key
to the technologies of the future and are also plentiful in Brazil and
elsewhere in Latin America.
Chinese
electric cars have been rapidly gaining market share in Asia and Europe, now
accounting for roughly two-thirds of the global market. In Brazil, the world’s
sixth-largest car market, over 80 percent of electric vehicles sold are
Chinese.
And
Chinese automakers have made it clear that they have even bigger plans for
Latin America.
Last
month, BYD inaugurated its biggest factory outside Asia, at a plant in Bahia
State, in northeastern Brazil, that was once run by Ford. Also this year, GWM,
another Chinese company, took over a massive plant that once belonged to the
German automaker Mercedes-Benz. The plan is to sell the electric cars produced
at these factories across Brazil and the rest of Latin America.
It is
already clear whether electric vehicles are leaving a mark on Brazilian cities,
including in Belém, a port city of 1.3 million near the mouth of the Amazon
River that is frequently choked by traffic.
On a
weekday just before the summit kicked off, the streets were gridlocked, but the
clouds of exhaust were thinner than they had once been. The roads were dotted
with electric cars, humming quietly in the midday traffic. Dignitaries zipped
around in convoys made up of GWM pickup trucks, their windows frosted by
air-conditioning. Electric buses shuttled passengers around the city.
“This
technology is transforming the whole world,” Mr. Kennedy said. “And China has
jumped into this space.”
Lis
Moriconi contributed reporting.
A
correction was made on Nov. 7, 2025: An earlier version of this article, using
information from a Brazilian official, misidentified the electric vehicle that
brought Mr. Lula to the summit. It was a Chevrolet, not a BYD. The error was
repeated in the headline and a picture caption.
Ana
Ionova is a contributor to The Times based in Rio de Janeiro, covering Brazil
and neighboring countries.


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