China's knockoff Range Rover is back – and there's nothing Jaguar Land Rover can do about it.

(YouTube/ Adam Smit)The Landwind X7 at the Guangzhou Auto Show.Jaguar Land Rover is in the midst of a major sales push in China. In order to have enough cars to sell, the company is planning to construct a $1.8-billion factory to build the Range Rover Evoque crossover.
Given that kind of commitment, the people at Jaguar Land Rover were not happy when a Chinese car company unveiled an Evoque facsimile, called the "Landwind X7," last year at the Guangzhou Auto Show.

Now the Landwind X7 is again on display, this time at the 2015 Shanghai Auto show. Not surprisingly, the controversial crossover has drawn the ire of Jaguar Land Rover.

"I really regret that all of a sudden copy-paste is coming up again," Jaguar Land Rover CEO Ralph Speth said at a press conference. "That will not help the reputation of China, of Chinese industry at all."

When the X7 debuted last November, Jaguar chief designer Ian Callum tweeted out photos of the Landwind. The bemused design legend wryly pointed out the aesthetic similarities between the Chinese car and the Evoque. 

New Land Wind from China. At Guangzhou auto show. Haven't we seen this before somewhere?? pic.twitter.com/dt9U85YDlY
— Ian Callum (@IanCallum) November 19, 2014
News of the knockoff Evoque first leaked last April, when Landwind reportedly patented a vehicle called the "E32" that looks to be the predecessor to the production X7

In a statement to the Wall Street Journal last November, Jaguar Land Rover made it clear that once an investigation is complete, the company will "take whatever steps are appropriate to protect its intellectual property."

However, JLR believes China's intellectual property laws won't be able to provide the company with sufficient legal recourse.

"There are no laws  to protect us, so we have to take it as it is," Speth told reporters. "In Europe, we can be protected against this kind of copy-paste in the design language, in the features but also the technology."

"You can't be protected in China," Speth added.
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