Will China spy on UK drivers using…?

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Travel and Tourism (Commonwealth Union ) _ Senior MPs have warned that China’s monopoly on the electric vehicle market poses a security threat to Britain comparable to the controversy surrounding the telecommunications company Huawei.

When new petrol and diesel car sales are prohibited in 2030, forecourts are anticipated to be overrun by up to 25 brands of inexpensive Chinese electric vehicles.

When most major manufacturers were concentrating on conventional automobiles, Beijing outstripped the West to overtake it as the dominant force in the electric vehicle (EV) market.

Britain will become more dependent on China as a result of the hasty phase-out of gasoline and diesel vehicles, which the Daily Mail is fighting to have reconsidered. This will also hurt UK manufacturing.

Senior Tories are now more worried than ever that having a large number of Chinese vehicles on British roads may reignite the country’s 2021 problem, when the UK started removing Huawei from its 5G networks due to security concerns.

When the Security Services disassembled a UK government car in January after discovering a Chinese SIM card capable of transmitting location data inside, worries about Beijing’s intentions grew.

The sensors used in driving assistance systems can be used to map neighbourhoods, which ‘in the wrong hands’ might allow hostile powers to map critical government buildings or military complexes, according to Tu Le of Sino car Insights, a consultancy that monitors China’s car sector.

A variety of EV suppliers from various countries are required, according to Dan Marks of the Royal United Services Institute security think-tank, who also noted that when China is the supplier, there should be strict, prescriptive security regulations.

China has a monopoly on the EV market in part because of its control over the supply chain. The majority of the mining of essential raw materials is under its control, Chinese companies manufacture 80% of the EV batteries, and it is the world’s largest exporter of automobiles.

It’s anticipated that Chinese companies like BYD, Ora, and Maxus would gain market share in Britain.

BYD reportedly outsold Tesla in terms of global sales of electric vehicles in 2017 and plans to open 100 UK outlets by 2026.

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