China's Heavy Truck Electrification to Hit Diesel Demand
By Reuters | 15 Jun, 2026
China will push to electrify heavy trucks, creating new opportunities for domestic truck and electric vehicle battery manufacturers, with the aim of having EVs make up 40% of new heavy truck sales by 2030.
China rolled out a push to electrify heavy trucks, a policy that is likely to accelerate a shift away from diesel that is cutting into fuel demand even as it creates new opportunities for domestic truck and electric vehicle battery manufacturers.
By 2030, EVs will make up 40% of new heavy truck sales in China and 20% of the total fleet, or 1.6 million vehicles, according to a notice on the Ministry of Transport website late on Friday. On some short-haul routes around Beijing, the target is 80%.
The target is the country's first detailed goal for the sector, surpassing Rystad Energy's September forecast that electric heavy trucks would account for 9% of China's fleet by 2030.
In 2025, electric models made up nearly a third of new heavy truck sales, according to data provider CVWorld.cn, having grown rapidly over two years from a niche product thanks to subsidies and expanded charging infrastructure.
The new plan also called for a buildout of supporting power infrastructure, targeting 3,000 charging and battery swap stations by 2030 as part of a "zero-carbon highway" push.
Industry forecasts suggest China could move toward electric trucks at an even faster pace than the targets indicate - similar to how progress in China's renewable rollout sped ahead of government targets. EV giant CATL predicted last year that as many as half of China's heavy truck sales could be electric models by 2028.
To support the rollout, electric trucks will be prioritised in China's trade-in programs, the new plan also said, which offer subsidies for swapping out older trucks. Those trade-in programs helped drive a previous wave of LNG truck purchases in recent years, alongside a drop in prices for the fuel.
SUPER-CHARGING
A state-backed push to electrify trucking will likely boost domestic truck makers, many of which have already started to export their vehicles, sparking concern from European manufacturers worried about an influx of cheap, high-quality products.
During a state-sponsored tour on Saturday, officials at Beiben Trucks Group in northern China's Inner Mongolia showcased a new dump truck model fitted with a 200 to 250-kilometre range battery from EV battery producer EVE Energy that can charge in 22 minutes.
Bai Xiaolong, a senior specialist in Beiben's strategy development department, said China is the company's main market given the limited charging infrastructure elsewhere, but it is exporting about a fifth of its trucks.
Southeast Asia is emerging as a bright spot for electric truck demand overseas, Bai said, particularly in mining applications in countries like Indonesia.
(Reporting by Colleen Howe and Sam Li; Editing by Thomas Derpinghaus)
Recent Articles
- China's Heavy Truck Electrification to Hit Diesel Demand
- Trump Push into Highly Dangerous Plutonium Unlikely to Fix US Nuclear Fuel Crunch
- India's May Wholesale Price Inflation Rose to 9.68% on Fuel-Cost Surge
- Tesla Presented Misleading ‘Full Self-Driving’ Safety Data to European Regulators
- Deal Includes Release of $25 Billion in Frozen Assets, US-Funded Reconstruction
- Fox Strikes $22 Billion Deal for Roku to Aid Streaming Shift
- Nvidia to Raise $20 Billion in First Corporate Bond Sale in Five Years
- Israel Remains Wild Card As Iran, US Seek Peace
- US Homebuilder Sentiment Falls in June Amid Rising Costs
- Will Cerebras' Dinner-Plate-Sized Chips Overtake Nvidia's Standard Modular Chips?
