Iran Daily

Carmakers bracing for shocks as electrifie­d future looming

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Auto industry executives gathering this week for the Paris Motor Show, to be held during October 4-14, will be rubbing shoulders with unusual company: Dozens of tech experts eager to tackle what many consider the ultimate connected device.

Electric vehicles are the stars of this year’s show, with premium brands like Mercedes and Audi finally jumping into the fray, but the promise of self-driving cars is also on display with dozens of startups on hand, AFP wrote.

“Each of these new cars requires 100 million lines of code: That’s five to six times more than in a Boeing,” Luc Chatel, the head of the French auto industry associatio­n, told executives on Monday.

The enthusiasm for the electrifie­d revolution is partly out of necessity, as regulators and local officials try to cut down on the smog chocking many large cities.

In Europe, carmakers are racing to comply with tough EU limits on CO2 emissions that take effect by 2021, and the introducti­on of tougher emission testing standards in the wake of the ‘dieselgate’ cheating scandal.

After investing billions of dollars in new batteries despite a still — uncertain payoff, companies are also betting that electric cars will help their bottom lines.

More reliable and with fewer moving parts than combustion engines, electric motors require far fewer workers to install and service.

But industry chiefs know they will not be able to develop the full potential of an electrifie­d, always-connected future on their own.

Google, Nokia and French IT specialist Atos are among the tech groups sending staff to the Paris show with pledges to help automakers navigate their industry’s seismic shift.

“Obviously, every company would love to do everything by themselves,” Carlos Ghosn, the head of the Renault-nissan-mitsubishi alliance, said in a keynote address on Monday.

“There is an explosion around the services of mobility, where carmakers are going to play a role, in partnershi­p with others,” he added, predicting that “we’re going to see in the Motor Show less and less car companies”.

Ghosn expects his group to sell 14 million cars by the end of 2022, of which 10 percent will be all-electric.

Steep prices, uncertain future

But joining with tech companies means ceding part of the profit, not exactly a welcome prospect for an industry just recently back on a stronger footing after years of bailouts for many in the wake of the 2008 economic crisis.

Automakers are also grappling with lithium-ion battery costs that keep electric vehicle prices well above those of traditiona­l cars — the new models are still loss-makers for most companies.

Mike David, an analyst with Bloomberg Intelligen­ce, forecast that prices would not come down to competitiv­e levels until 2025.

And with new technologi­es comes the chance for upstarts to jump in: Tesla’s market value is greater than that of Renault and PSA combined despite production snafus and recent blunders by its flamboyant founder Elon Musk.

Adding to the headwinds are changing consumer tastes: More people now live in urban centers where alternativ­e modes of transport from cycling to scooters are flourishin­g amid the zero-emission zeal.

Many no longer see the need for owning a car, electric or not.

“Single-use vehicles are wasteful,” said Ian Simmons of Magna Internatio­nal, a parts maker specializi­ng in ‘green mobility’.

Car-sharing and ride-hailing services like Uber and Lyft — which are racing ahead with their own autonomous driving research — will require heavy tech investment­s in cars and city infrastruc­ture, he said.

But with Audi and Mercedes showing off all-electric SUVS this week — shortly after Ferrari announced an ambitious plan for hybrids — more buyers might be convinced their performanc­e has caught up with combustion engines.

“Their arrival also dispels any doubts over battery or quality issues,” JATO analyst Felipe Munoz wrote in a research note.

The Paris Motor Show opens to the public on Thursday and runs until October 14.

Mazda aim

Mazda Motor Corp. said on Tuesday that all of the vehicles it produces by 2030 will incorporat­e electrific­ation, while five percent of its cars will be all-battery electric vehicles (EVS).

The Japanese automaker joins a growing number of global automakers who are planning to reduce emissions by producing more gasoline-hybrid vehicles, plugin hybrids and battery EVS, according to Reuters.

“By 2030, Mazda expects that internal combustion engines combined with some form of electrific­ation will account for 95 percent of the vehicles it produces and battery electric vehicles will account for five percent,” the automaker said in a statement.

Mazda has said that it plans to market an all-battery EV in 2020. On Tuesday it said it would develop two battery EVS, one which will be powered solely by battery and another which will pair a battery with a range extender powered by the automaker’s rotary engine.

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