The Phnom Penh Post

After dieselgate, Volkswagen goes electric

- Michelle Fitzpatric­k

VOLKSWAGEN yesterday said it wanted to be the world leader in electric cars by 2025 as the German car giant unveiled a major shift to clean-energy vehicles in the wake of the dieselgate emissions cheating scandal.

The US market, where the pollution crisis first erupted, will play a key role in the revamp, VW brand chief Herbert Diess said, announcing a “comeback story” with plans for electric cars to be built in North America from 2021.

“By 2025 we plan to sell 1 million elect r ic ca rs per yea r, a nd by t hen we also want to be the global market leader i n ele c t romobi l it y,” Diess said at a presentati­on of the brand’s future plans.

“Going forward our electric cars will be the hallmark of Volkswagen,” he told reporters at the VW group’s Wolfsburg headquarte­rs in northern Germany.

Last year, Volkswagen sold 4.4 million of its own-brand passenger cars worldwide.

The company’s switch to electric will be made possible through new investment­s and economies of scale, Diess said, and is a crucial part of the troubled brand’s efforts to reinvent itself.

VW on Friday already announced the biggest revamp in its history, saying it would cut 30,000 jobs to save $3.9 billion a year by 2020, while ramping up investment in future technologi­es such as electric cars, self-driving cars and digitalisa­tion.

“Our industry will undergo more fundamenta­l change over the next 10 years than ever before,” Diess said, predicting that “the breakthrou­gh” of electric cars was just five years away and would be driven by environmen­tal concerns.

The shake-up at Volkswagen’s core brand comes as the group tries to recover from the biggest crisis in its history after it admitted last year to installing emissions cheating software in some 11 million diesel vehicles worldwide.

The so-called defeat devices could detect when a vehicle was undergoing regulatory tests and lowered emissions accordingl­y to make the cars seem less polluting than they were.

Most of the cars bore the Volkswagen logo but vehicles by other VW group companies such as Audi, Seat and Skoda were also affected.

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