Chery Electric Car, Sept. 1, 2015
A Chery electric car is being charged at a charging station in Dalian in the Liaoning province of China Sept. 1, 2015. Stringer/Reuters

SHANGHAI (Reuters) -- China wants to speed construction of a national network to charge electric cars, as it seeks to reach an ambitious goal of 5 million green vehicles on its roads by 2020, the official news agency Xinhua said Sunday, citing a senior energy official. A shortage of charging facilities has long been a roadblock for sales by the makers of electric cars, ranging from the domestic BYD Co. Ltd. to its U.S. rival Tesla Motors Inc., as well as for government plans to rein in high levels of pollution.

China has made some progress on car-charging infrastructure, but its approach has lacked coordination, National Energy Administration deputy head Zheng Zhajie said. "It's like with phone chargers, it's a bit all over the place," he told Xinhua. "Everyone has a pile of different chargers and a pile of batteries. Now we're trying to improve things, moving towards unifying and standardizing."

China aims to equip at least one in 10 public car-park facilities for electric-car charging, he said, adding that the State Council, or cabinet, would soon issue guidance for the infrastructure rollout.

China cut taxes on small-engine cars last week in an effort to revive its wider automobile market, the world's biggest since 2009, although a recent economic slowdown has weighed on sales. But one bright spot this year has been sales of green cars, which have almost quadrupled from the 2014 figure. The government sees electric cars as China's best shot at closing a competitive gap with global rivals who have a 100-year head start in traditional combustion engines.

China has rolled out aggressive targets for vehicle fuel efficiency that will grow gradually stricter until 2020, when its standards will exceed those of the U.S. and roughly match Japan.

The government has also offered tax cuts for green vehicles and proposed extending subsidies, mostly for domestic producers, to help automakers meet these targets.

(Reporting by Adam Jourdan; Editing by Clarence Fernandez)