As Trump talks tariffs, his Argentine ally welcomes a first shipload of
Chinese EVs
[January 22, 2026] By
ISABEL DEBRE and VICTOR CAIVANO
ZÁRATE, Argentina (AP) — The vast field of over 5,800 electric and
hybrid vehicles gleamed on the cargo deck of the BYD Changzhou, an
Chinese container vessel unloading Wednesday at a river port in eastern
Argentina.
In other places, such a scene would not be noteworthy. Chinese automaker
BYD has sped up its exports and undercut rivals the world over, alarming
Washington, upsetting Western and Japanese auto giants and unnerving
local industries across Southeast Asia, Africa and Latin America.
But the sight of so many new Chinese EVs gliding onto a muddy river bank
in Buenos Aires province was unprecedented for Argentina, its
crisis-stricken economy dominated for years by a left-wing populist
movement that protected local industry with stiff tariffs and import
restrictions.
“For decades people in Argentina had this vision that everything here
must be manufactured here," said Claudio Damiano, a professor in the
Institute of Transportation at Argentina’s National University of San
Martin. “The boat has a symbolic value as the first step for BYD.
Everyone’s wondering how far it will go.”
The shipment also came in stark contrast to the news in Brussels, where
on Wednesday European Union lawmakers voted to delay ratification of a
landmark free trade deal with the Mercosur group of South American
countries, including Argentina, which promises to tear down trade
barriers for European industrial imports and supercharge consumption of
German EVs.
“For the Europeans, there's just no possibility of competing with the
Chinese,” Damiano said.

The ship shocks a long-closed economy
Argentina became one of the region’s most closed economies under
Kirchnerism — the movement formed by ex-President Cristina Fernández de
Kirchner and her late husband, former President Néstor Kirchner, which
championed the rights of the downtrodden, defaulted on sovereign debt
and disdained global trade as a destructive force.
A chronically depreciating peso and sky-high taxes constrained consumer
choice, compelling well-heeled Argentines to smuggle iPhones and Zara
hauls into the country when returning from vacations abroad.
Fed up with cycles of economic crisis, Argentines vaulted radical
libertarian President Javier Milei to power in 2023. He railed against
Kirchnerism, vowed to destroy the state and praised U.S. President
Donald Trump as an ideological soulmate.
Argentina transforms with an influx of imports
For the last two years, Milei has has done the exact opposite of his
most powerful ally in Washington.
While Trump has waged trade wars, Milei has flung open Argentina’s doors
to imports, slashed trade barriers, unwound customs red tape and shored
up the local currency to make foreign goods more affordable.
Last year Argentina logged a record 30% increase in imports compared to
the year before — much of it in the form of $3 milk frothers and $10
dresses piling up on Argentines' doorsteps from Asian online retailers
such as Temu and Shein.
Now Chinese automakers — once choked by 35% levies on imports — are
seizing on a new measure to allow 50,000 electric and hybrid cars into
the country this year tariff-free. The first shipment arrived Monday at
Zárate Port after a 23-day voyage from Singapore.
Telling business and political leaders Wednesday at the World Economic
Forum in Davos that that his drastic deregulation measures “allow us to
have a more dynamically efficient economy,” Milei declared: “This is
MAGA, ‘Make Argentina Great Again.

[to top of second column] |

Pablo Naya, the owner of Sero Electric, poses next to one of the
company's electric microcars at its factory in Castelar, Argentina,
Wednesday, Jan. 21, 2026. (AP Photo/Victor R. Caivano)
 Trump and Milei bond despite
differences
Milei and Trump share a contempt for perceived “wokeness,” a
resentment of multilateral institutions like the United Nations, a
denial of climate change and a zeal for massive budget cuts.
The ideological bond has paid dividends for Milei: Argentina is a
rare place in the region where Trump has wielded the might of the
U.S. to help an ally rather than enforce demands with military
threats, as he has in Colombia and Mexico. Last year he offered
Milei a $20 billion credit swap to boost his friend's chances in a
crucial midterm election.
Yet at Davos, the leaders' differences were on display. Milei
delivered his anti-interventionist, libertarian interpretation of
MAGA shortly after Trump laid out his own vision for making America
great: demanding control of Greenland and threatening allies with
tariffs and other consequences if they don’t fall in line.
For all of Trump's support, China has perhaps benefited most from
Milei's free-market drive.
Chinese imports to Argentina surged over 57% last year compared to
the year before. Chinese investment poured into Argentina's energy
and mining sectors.
“Argentina has rejoined the world," government spokesperson Javier
Lanari said of Monday's Chinese car shipment. “Very soon, the
Cuban-made vehicles left to us by Kirchnerism will be part of a sad
and dark past.”
China ‘won the race’ in Argentina
BYD and similar Chinese cars have already taken the streets of Latin
America by storm, drawing controversy and backlash from Mexico City
to Rio de Janeiro.
Now the brands are best positioned to reap the rewards of Milei’s
zero-tariff quota for EVs, which applies only to cars under $16,000,
experts say.
“Chinese manufacturers have the technology and the ability to meet
the price limits set by the government," said Andrés Civetta, an
economist specializing in the auto sector at the Argentine
consulting firm Abeceb. “China has won the race."

Western car manufacturers in Argentina have raised alarms about
unfair competition, and opposition lawmakers have criticized
officials on the Chinese EV tariff exemption, with the comptroller
general posting on social media, “Trump is right: China must be
stopped.”
But Argentina is still far behind its neighbors in developing its EV
industry, said Pablo Naya, the creator of Sero Electric, Argentina's
only domestic electric car manufacturer.
The country's aging power grid is nowhere near ready for a wave of
electric cars to strain it en masse, he said. And if something goes
wrong with a Chinese EV on the road, there are currently no dealers'
service centers able to undertake internal repairs.
“Honestly, we’re not worried,” Naya said.
But if or when Argentine infrastructure and consumer aspirations
catch up to Chinese supply, it will be a different story.
“Then that would get complicated for us,” he said from the Sero
Electric factory in the Buenos Aires suburb of Castelar. “We'd have
a problem."
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