National Post

Audi’s sedan concept fresh bid to top Tesla

- Christoph Rauwald

Audi offered a first glimpse of a full-sized electric sedan that will be key to deliver on a fresh push to narrow a technology gap with Tesla Inc. and expand deliveries and profits by the end of the decade.

The Grandspher­e design concept marks the first vehicle developed by an engineerin­g task force dubbed Artemis that was set up last year. It’s the precursor to a sedan slated for production in 2025 that will boast an allnew software stack capable of taking over the task of driving from humans under certain conditions.

“Highly automated driving is the game-changer in the auto industry,” Oliver Hoffmann, Audi’s developmen­t chief, told reporters ahead of Europe’s first motor show since the pandemic next week in Munich. The comment echoes the view of Herbert Diess, chief executive officer of Audi’s parent Volkswagen AG, who expects autonomy to be even more transforma­tive than electrific­ation.

VW’S premium-car unit has embarked on a deep overhaul to boost efficiency and share technology across Europe’s biggest auto-making group, with joint efforts ranging from software to battery cells. Developing these components requires massive investment­s as the industry pivots away from internal combustion engines.

“For some of our competitor­s, this is becoming a question of survival, so we’re grateful to be part of such a strong group,” Audi CEO Markus Duesmann said. Superior economies of scale compared to rivals like Mercedes-benz, BMW AG or Tesla should help Audi boost sales and profitabil­ity, he said.

Audi expects to almost double annual deliveries to 3 million cars in 2030 compared to 1.7 million last year, when sales were slammed by the COVID-19 pandemic.

“This goal is very ambitious, but in light of the market forecasts and our attractive product portfolio, it’s possible,” Duesmann said. “At the same time, profitabil­ity is key.”

Audi has resumed posting quarterly return on sales within its targeted 9-to-11 per cent range. Growing economies of scale achieved by the VW group suggest that sustaining an 11 per cent margin “is definitely realistic for us in the long term,” Duesmann said.

The Grandspher­e concept is 5.35 metres long and sports 23-inch wheels as well as a retractabl­e steering wheel. It can recharge with enough energy for more than 300 kilometres of driving in 10 minutes and could top out at more than 750 kilometres of range.

Audi has pledged that from 2026 onward, all new vehicles it introduces will be fully electric, but sustaining profits from combustion-engine models will be vital to help finance the technology shift. The brand expects the margin gap between electric and combustion cars to close in two or three years.

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