Wheels (Australia)

FERRARI EV

Maranello’s phased approach to plug-in future

- JOHN CAREY

Mainstream plug-in Prancing Horse on a canter

FERRARI is working on EV powertrain­s... for now only for Maserati. But it is only a matter of time until there’s a new model from Maranello with a recharge port instead of a fuel filler. As outlined in FCA’S fiveyear plan last month, Maserati will soon drop diesel engines. It will produce only plug-in petrolelec­tric hybrid and pure batterypow­ered vehicles and Ferrari will supply the powertrain­s for all of them.

The Ferrari-developed EV powertrain will deliver Ferrarigra­de performanc­e. Tim Kuniskis, the Fiat Chrysler Automobile­s exec who heads both Maserati and Alfa Romeo, promises 0-100km/h accelerati­on in around 2.0 seconds and a 300km/h-plus top speed for its new brand-halo sports car in his presentati­on.

The EVS, marketed under the ‘Maserati Blue’ banner, will utilise three electric motors. It’s certain two will be mounted on the rear axle, for full torque-vectoring capability. And 800-volt battery packs will deliver high power, long range and quick recharging. This is exactly the kind of highend EV technology that Ferrari would choose.

Ferrari and FCA head Sergio Marchionne sees plug-in vehicles becoming a staple of Maranello’s model mix. “I think I’ve been clear on the topic that we’re going to embrace electrific­ation,” he said at Ferrari’s Geneva Internatio­nal motor show press conference last March. “We are going to bring it in and make it a mainstay of our offering.”

At the same time he confirmed Ferrari would launch a hybrid model in 2019. He implied it would be a plug-in hybrid, unlike the Laferrari, and that it wouldn’t be a supercar.

“In the Laferrari it’s an interestin­g add-on that’s used for power,” he said, referring to hybrid tech. “In the case of the next hybrid I think it needs to become more traditiona­l in a sense, because it needs to fulfil a different role.”

Ferrari, recently spun off from FCA, will present its separate plan to investors come September. Marchionne hopes it will include a new model or concept reveal.

Count on it being large, since size is needed to make space for battery packs and hybrid hardware. Plug-in hyper-hybrid SUV? Or a ‘Ferrari Red’-branded EV pointing to a potential GTC4 Lusso replacemen­t? Both are now possible.

Whatever it is, a utility vehicle will stretch Maranello’s designers. “Doing an incredibly elegant car that embodies Ferrari values is not an easy thing,” Marchionne admitted in Geneva last March.

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