Irish Independent

VW will spend €10bn on electric vehicles for China

- Reuters Beijing Newsroom

VOLKSWAGEN Group has said it plans to spend €10bn by 2025 to develop and manufactur­e all-electric and plug-in hybrid vehicles as it seeks to comply with upcoming stringent rules in China.

The group, which includes Volkswagen and Audi, intends to launch 15 of the so-called new energy vehicles (NEV) models over the next two to three years, and an additional 25 after 2025, China chief Jochem Heizmann told Reuters yesterday.

China’s NEV production and sales quotas, which must be met by 2019, have prompted a flurry of electric car deals and new launches as automakers in China race to ensure they do not fall short.

Carmakers that do fall short will be required to buy credits.

Volkswagen has around 10 NEVs already on the market in China, although all are imported models with limited sales volumes, according to a company spokeswoma­n.

Mr Heizmann, speaking ahead of the Guangzhou car show, added that the group is aiming to sell 400,000 new energy vehicles per year in China by 2020 and 1.5m per year by 2025. NEVs refer to all-electric battery cars and heavily electrifie­d plug-in hybrids. Mr Heizmann said some of those models will have a 400-600km driving range on a single full charge. By comparison, Tesla’s model S has a range of 490km and as much as 632km depending on battery capacity, according to the company.

The Volkswagen Group is also confident that its group companies and their local China joint venture partners will be able to generate enough NEV sales volume to account for NEV quotas by 2019, Mr Heizmann said, adding that there will be no need to buy credits.

“We need high volumes of new energy vehicles... we are working on full speed on that.”

Last week, General Motors’ China chief Matt Tsien told reporters GM’s China joint ventures will be able to generate enough NEV sales volume to account for NEV quotas by 2019 and without the need to buy credits. Mr Tsien said both GM and its China joint-venture partners “are working to at least meet, if not exceed, those credit mandate requiremen­ts”.

In the US, meanwhile, Tesla is pushing ahead with a prototype electric big-rig truck, which may be able to drive itself, throwing the company into a new market even as it struggles to roll out an affordable sedan which is central to the company’s future.

CEO Elon Musk has described electric trucks as Tesla’s next effort to move the economy away from fossil fuels through projects including electric cars, solar roofs and power storage.

But some analysts fear the truck, named Tesla Semi, will be an expensive distractio­n for Tesla, which is in a self-described “manufactur­ing hell” starting up production of the $35,000 Model 3 sedan.

 ??  ?? Visitors try out a car ataVW workshop prior to the Auto Guangzhou car show in China
Visitors try out a car ataVW workshop prior to the Auto Guangzhou car show in China

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