For years, China made it look like the internal combustion engine was finished.
Now, the Chinese auto industry is proving the opposite.
After going all-in on EVs, building the world’s biggest battery supply chain and pushing electric adoption past 50% domestically, some of China’s biggest automakers are pouring serious money back into gasoline tech.
Not as a step backward, but as a second front.
EV Leader… Still Investing In Gas
Photo Courtesy: Geely.
Let’s just get this out in the open straight away: China hasn’t abandoned EVs.
Companies like BYD are still dominating global electric sales, and the country controls a massive share of battery production.
However, at the same time, brands like Geely and Chery are developing some of the most advanced combustion engines we’ve ever seen.
That’s not because they don’t believe in EVs, it’s just another layer of their strategy.
The Efficiency Numbers Are Getting Wild
Image Credit: Geely.
Here’s where things get interesting.
Geely recently hit 48.4% thermal efficiency with its latest hybrid system. Chery went even further, claiming 48.5%.
That might not sound like much, but in engine terms, it’s huge.
For context, the Toyota Prius, long considered the benchmark for efficiency, sits around 44%.
That gap is massive in engineering terms, and it tells us that the combustion engine isn’t standing still.
Why China Is Playing Both Sides
Photo Courtesy: Autorepublika.
China’s domestic market might be rapidly electrifying, but the rest of the world isn’t moving at the same speed.
Most global markets still rely heavily on gasoline, so Chinese automakers are doing something smart: EVs for China and advanced markets, ultra-efficient hybrids and ICE cars for global exports.
These carmakers are not doing either/or, they’re playing both sides for maximum profits.
Driven By Exports
Photo Courtesy: BYD.
Competition inside China is brutal! Margins are shrinking as there are too many brands and too many cars, so companies are looking outward.
In many markets, especially developing ones, EV infrastructure just isn’t ready. That’s where highly efficient hybrids come in.
They’re easier to adopt, cheaper to run, and don’t require a full charging network.
This Should Worry Western Automakers
Image Credit: Ford.
Here’s the part that gets overlooked.
While Western brands are heavily focused on electrification timelines, Chinese automakers are improving everything at once.
They’re building better EVs, better batteries, smarter hybrids, and more efficient gas engines, and that kind of parallel development is hard to compete with.
The ICE Engine Isn’t Dead—It’s Evolving
Image Credit: Geely.
For years, the narrative was that electric replaces gasoline, but reality is more complicated.
The internal combustion engine isn’t disappearing overnight; it’s being refined, optimized, and integrated into hybrid systems that are more efficient than ever, and China wants to lead that evolution, too, rather than bet on a single outcome.
While the world argues about electric vs gas, China is building both and getting very good at it, and that might be the smartest move of all.
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