Deutsche Welle (English edition)

A motor show with visitors: IAA finds new home in Munich

The automotive industry is doing well despite COVID-19, while the trade show industry is reeling from the pandemic. At the IAA Mobility in Munich, the two will come together for a fresh start.

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It is indeed a new start in several respects. For one, the Internatio­nal Motor Show (IAA) is the first major trade show in Germany to throw open its gates to the public since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic.

It offers a glimmer of hope for the hard-hit trade show industry, which has been left nursing an economic loss of over €40 billion ($47 billion) due to canceled events during the pandemic, according to the Associatio­n of the German Trade Fair Industry (AUMA).

On the other hand, it is a new beginning for the IAA itself. After half a century in Berlin and after almost seven decades in Frankfurt, the premier German motor show has now found a new home in Munich.

That's not all: After an underwhelm­ing IAA in Frankfurt two years ago, the show's organizer, the German Associatio­n of the Automotive Industry (VDA), had promised an overhaul. However, with the classic auto shows struggling to stay relevant and because the "pure display of sheet metal is no longer enough" — as auto expert Peter Fuss from EY consultanc­y puts it — the IAA is daring to experiment.

Hybrid trade fair … but with a difference

The event asks the question "What will move us next?" — and answers it with an assortment of mobility options. The car is just one piece of the puzzle. The event will feature electric scooters and bicycles, as well as trams, buses and autonomous vehicles, underscori­ng that personal mobility options such as e-scooters and bicycles are as much a part of the mix as cars, buses and self-driving vehicles.

The IAA Mobility will be a hybrid trade show, but not in the sense that has become the norm during the pandemic, one where attendees can join inperson or virtually. The motor show is being organized both on the exhibition grounds, where product presentati­ons and trade conference­s will be held, and at popular squares in downtown Munich. The two parts are connected by a 12-kilometer (7.5mile) Blue Lane, which doubles up as a lane for test drives.

The experiment is not without risk. Auto expert Ferdinand Dudenhöffe­r takes a skeptical view of the "trade show that doesn't want to be one," as he wrote in his preview. He rues the absence of a clear focus on the car. "If the car is no longer the focus, then the auto show — once the world's largest — loses its meaning."

A pale shadow of past glory

This is already apparent. Apart from the three major German manufactur­ers (VW, BMW and Mercedes-Benz), only Hyundai, Renault-Dacia and a few newcomers from China are taking part in the show. The likes of Toyota, Stellantis (which owns brands like Chrysler, Fiat and Opel) and General Motors have graciously declined. Tesla has never been to an IAA anyway, but Volvo, Ferrari and Rolls-Royce have also given it a pass this year.

Even the German car majors only have a modest presence relative to their often grandiose appearance­s at past IAAs in Frankfurt. And whether it is going to boost the popularity of the new IAA that Volkswagen is exhibiting mostly on the trade fair grounds, while Mercedes-Benz is using the open space in front of the historic Feldherrnh­alle, will become clear in the coming days.

Yet the auto industry — and this brings us to another new start — is doing quite well right now despite the pandemic, a shortage of semiconduc­tors and supply chain bottleneck­s.

According to the latest figures from the consulting firm EY, the global automotive industry has never earned as much money operationa­lly as it did in the first half of 2021. The 16 largest auto companies generated operating profits of €71.5 billion compared with a loss of about €4 billion in the same period last year. One of the reasons: Due to the dramatic shortage of computer chips, manufactur­ers are currently prioritizi­ng the production of high-margin models, and thus earning big bucks.

Chancellor is coming, so are the demonstrat­ors

But the automakers urgently need this money as they undergo a major transforma­tion. In view of climate change, many countries have announced plans to phase out combustion engines. The European Union, for example, has proposed to effectivel­y ban the sale of internal combustion engine vehicles from 2035.

As a result, global carmakers, including those in Germany, are turning their focus toward electric vehicles. At the same time, they must also invest in new operating systems for their "smartphone­s on four wheels" in order to catch up with Tesla. In this way, the car could be integrated into various mobility concepts, including those where owning a car is not a priority.

It is precisely this mobility puzzle that the IAA will try to showcase in Munich. The event is unlikely to attract anywhere close to the 500,000 visitors that descended on the Frankfurt fairground­s two years ago. In the best of times, up to a million people pushed their way through the halls at the Frankfurt Motor Show.

In any case, Angela Merkel will be among the visitors. Germany's outgoing chancellor will open the show on Tuesday, and plenty of critics of the auto industry will also make their presence felt.

Various bicycle rallies and blockades are planned, similar to demonstrat­ions seen in Frankfurt in 2019. The protests, which sometimes turned violent, were among the factors that contribute­d to the IAA ditching the

German banking metropolis. But

Frankfurt now has a new trade fair: Starting in 2022, the Eurobike bicycle trade show will be held there. Perhaps a sign of times to come. The article has been adapted from the original German

 ??  ?? German carmakers like VW and Daimler are among the biggest attraction­s at the show
German carmakers like VW and Daimler are among the biggest attraction­s at the show
 ??  ?? IAA Mobility 2021 asks the question: 'What will move us next?'
IAA Mobility 2021 asks the question: 'What will move us next?'

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