BYD plans to introduce its megawatt-class flash-charging network in Canada, marking its first high-power charging infrastructure push into North America. The move is positioned as groundwork for future EV sales, using self-built infrastructure to address local charging pain points. If it improves winter charging performance, BYD could echo Tesla’s early strategy of turning charging access into a market advantage.
BYD has announced a limited liability commitment for its God’s Eye intelligent driving system in China. If an accident is caused by the system, the company says it will cover related damages during the first year after purchase. The move raises a broader question: whether automakers’ willingness to assume responsibility could become a new benchmark for semi-autonomous driving products.
This item points to a Lumafield “Scan of the Month” post about CT scans of BYD car parts. With no article body provided, the only confirmed subject is non-destructive imaging of automotive components from BYD. The post appears most relevant to readers interested in hardware inspection, manufacturing analysis, reverse engineering, quality control, and how industrial CT scanning can reveal internal structures without disassembly.
Europe’s new-car market grew in April, supported by strong demand for electric vehicles. EV sales have now increased for 16 consecutive months, showing continued momentum in the region. Tesla sales jumped 40%, but BYD doubled sales and surpassed Tesla, highlighting the rapid expansion of Chinese EV brands in Europe.