Chinese home appliance firm targets Europeans’ ‘pain points’
Date:2025-09-15 08:31:29 Click:687次
An employee of Chinese home appliance maker Midea Group inspects air conditioners at a workshop in Guangzhou, Guangdong province, in March. (PHOTO/XINHUA)
From air conditioners to rice cookers, Midea is a household name in China. Now with a regional research center taking shape in Germany, the Chinese home appliance giant is studying the user habits of the Europeans and trying to make life easier for them.
When Dong Yunjun was studying in Germany more than a decade ago, the hot days in summer were short. There were only two weeks in July when people felt the heat, but they could easily bear through it.
"Gone were those good old days. In recent years, we have had about four to five weeks of sultry weather," said Dong, technical leader for the residential air conditioning project at Midea's research and development center in Germany.
As heatwaves swept Europe more frequently due to climate change, more Germans started to consider installing an air conditioner. But it's extremely hard to get it installed in Germany and only about one in eight German households use air conditioning, according to a recent survey.
"People need to get all residents' consent for drilling a hole in the wall of an apartment building, and they have to pay a lot of money and book in weeks' advance for specialized workers, all of which hold back them from buying an air conditioner," said Dong who joined Midea's research arm in Germany in 2021, and has been working to design an easy-to-install air conditioner.
The German research and development center of Midea Europe is located in Stuttgart, Germany. (Photo provided to China Daily)
In the past two years, Dong and his team worked out a portable split air conditioner – weighing only 10 kilograms, its outdoor unit can be put under the window with a bracket and connected with the indoor unit by a flat tube through a narrow window gap. The whole installation involves no drilling and can be done by just one person.
After gathering feedback from hundreds of households across Europe, and on-site testing in 50 German households, Dong is confident that this air conditioner, called PortaSplit, will have a big sale when launched next year.
The portable air conditioner is just one of many home appliances that Midea's R&D center in southwest Germany's city of Stuttgart is working on. Founded in 2019, the center has now hired around 50 people from different European countries to develop and test products, ranging from washing machines and ovens to coffee makers and fridges, making them fit local user habits and preferences.