BYD Co. will start offering a full suite of electric-vehicle components to rivals and aspiring auto manufacturers to diversify its revenue sources amid sputtering car demand.

Among the parts that the Shenzhen-based company makes and now sells are EV batteries, powertrains and lights, founder Wang Chuanfu said in an online press conference on Sunday.

BYD, China’s biggest maker of vehicles powered by alternative energy for the past six years, will use the brand name FinDreams for the parts business.

EV sales have been slumping in China since July, when the country reduced sales subsidies, and the decline has been exacerbated by the coronavirus outbreak. BYD, which is financially more stable than most local EV competitors, is betting the new business will help it return to growth quicker even as the market contracts.

“BYD will open its technology and products to the whole world,” Wang said. “FinDreams units will help change the role participants in Chinese auto industry play in the global new energy arena.”

BYD, founded as a mobile-phone battery maker, has been growing by expanding into new businesses over the past two decades. The company started car manufacturing in 2003 and rolled out its first vehicles powered by lithium-iron-phosphate batteries in 2006. It has since added electric buses, utility vehicles, energy storage equipments, monorail and insulated gate bipolar transistors to its offering.

To help fight the spread of the coronavirus, the company expanded to face masks and reached a daily production capacity of 10 million units this past week, according to Wang.

The versatility of its manufacturing operations has helped BYD become self-reliant on EV parts. While until recently it focused on making components only for internal purposes, the company is now seeking to take advantage of a potential recovery and future growth of the market.

The annual value of batteries used in electric vehicles, electric buses and related energy storage is set to balloon about 10 times to a potential $500 billion by 2050, according to Sanford C. Bernstein & Co.

To demonstrate its competitiveness, BYD on Sunday unveiled test results of its so-called “blade battery,” touting it as a cost-competitive, safer and compact offering. Almost all automakers are in talks with BYD over collaboration on the product, according to He Long, head of BYD’s car battery business.

Last year, BYD signed an agreement with Toyota Motor Corp. on EV battery supply and joint product development, with the companies setting up an jointly owned venture this month. BYD also cooperates with Daimler AG to produce Denza brand EVs.