Reuters
It is also a partner in a new powertrain company being set up with Renault.
In 2022 Chinese-made electric vehicles already had a 9 percent market share in Europe, nearly double the previous year, according to consultancy Inovev, and the pace is picking up.
Lynk & CO says it had 200,000 monthly memberships in Europe as of April, of which around 25,000 are in France, up from 180,000 and 21,000 respectively a month earlier.
In France, where the automaker plans to open its first selling space in Paris in late 2023 or early 2024, it offers a monthly subscription rate of 550 euros, with a full purchase price of 44,500 euros ($48,986) in the premium segment, higher than SAIC-owned MG Motor.
The French government, lobbying to attract foreign gigafactories and automaking plants, is planning to make a 5,000-euro ($5,504) subsidy available to electric car buyers conditional on meeting low-carbon standards when manufactured - which it says would in effect exclude cars not made in Europe.
Visser said Lynk & CO would have to consider manufacturing cars in Europe, also given rising tensions between China and the U.S.
"It's becoming more and more necessary to have local manufacturing sites ... rather than import cars from China."