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Wednesday, February 25, 2026

Chery says more to come from petrol and diesel engine development


There’s still more progress to be made on internal combustion engines, according to Chery – China’s largest vehicle exporter – despite the nation’s automotive industry forging a reputation for electric vehicles (EVs).

A raft of automakers previously pledged to sell only EVs by specific target dates, such as Volvo, Mercedes-Benz and Volkswagen – only to postpone the milestone after slower-than-expected take-up due to factors including global market volatility. Others, like Ford, have lost billions on EV development.

Speaking to CarExpert, chief engineer of Chery International Peter Matkin said the company has followed a similar approach to Toyota – the world’s biggest automaker by sales – by not giving up on internal combustion engine development despite the push to EVs.

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“We haven’t stopped,” Mr Matkin said. “We’ve continued to try and increase the efficiency of the internal combustion engine. It’s interesting when you’re working in China with traditional OEMs; it sort of goes against some of the logic.”

“Looking globally – and everybody’s announcing – they’re all saying we’re not going to spend anything on the internal combustion engine – everything is New Energy.”

New energy vehicle (NEV) is a Chinese industry term that covers plug-in hybrids (PHEVs), hydrogen fuel-cell electric vehicles (FCEVs), battery-electric vehicles (EVs), and extended-range electric vehicles (EREVs).