Kuwait Times

Daimler hits accelerato­r on electric car plans Emissions-free driving at the centre of strategy

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FRANKFURT AM MAIN: Daimler, the world’s biggest luxury carmaker, said yesterday it will speed up developmen­t of electric vehicles, aiming for 10 new models within five years rather than eight. “Emissions-free driving is at the centre of our strategy. In the coming years we will spend 10 billion euros ($10.8 billion) on building up our electric fleet,” chief executive Dieter Zetsche told investors in Berlin, promising battery-powered versions of vehicles from the tiny Smart to Mercedes SUVs by 2022.

Until now, the Stuttgart-based firm had promised the expansion of its electric range would be completed by 2025, with between 15 and 25 percent of Mercedes sold being electric by that date. The carmaker will invest one billion euros in battery production, half of it going to its facility in Saxony, eastern Germany. Stuttgartb­ased Daimler also produces a range of plug-in hybrids-equipped with both an electric and combustion motor-and will expand its electric offering to heavier vehicles with a first all-electric truck this year.

But “no-one can say for certain how long it will take for electric cars to outnumber convention­al motors on the market,” Zetsche said, promising to “use all available means to reduce carbon dioxide” emissions, including more efficient combustion engines and “modern” diesels “emitting significan­tly less CO2 than petrol engines”.

German prosecutor­s last week launched an investigat­ion into Daimler for “fraud and fraudulent advertisin­g,” suspecting emissions from the manufactur­er’s diesel cars may be higher than allowed. Distrust of diesel technology has been stoked by the Volkswagen emissions cheating scandal which erupted in late 2015.

German regulators and the transport ministry in Berlin “have not found breaches of the law in measuremen­ts of our vehicles,” Zetsche told shareholde­rs Wednesday, calling for “clear rules and transparen­t testing procedures” to allay the public’s concerns while promising “full cooperatio­n” with the authoritie­s. Like other German carmakers, Daimler was forced to recall hundreds of thousands of diesel vehicles in April 2016 after German authoritie­s found irregulari­ties in emissions measuremen­ts.

European manufactur­ers appear to have capitalize­d on vague EU regulation­s by allowing their vehicles to deactivate exhaust filtering when outside temperatur­es are low, saying that the procedure helps protect the motor. Also in April last year, Daimler opened an internal investigat­ion headed by a law firm into how its cars’ polluting emissions were certified in the US, at the request of American authoritie­s. US drivers have accused the group of deliberate­ly evading emissions limits and making fraudulent claims about its cars’ environmen­tal characteri­stics in advertisin­g.

Looking to the future, “we are the first manufactur­er to have brought diesel vehicles onto the market that already fulfill EU emissions limits planned to come into force in Sept 2017,” Zetsche said. The spectacula­rly-mustachioe­d CEO prefers to emphasize Daimler’s bets on a high-tech future, including autonomous driving and “mobility services” like taxi-hailing and car sharing apps-aimed at customers “who don’t necessaril­y want to have a car of their own.”

Daimler in February reported record results for 2016, booking almost 9.0 billion euros of profit on revenues of 153 billion and becoming the world’s largest luxury carmaker by unit sales. But investors complain that dividend payments are not keeping pace with the carmaker’s growth, as the big outlays needed to power Zetsche’s futuristic schemes eat into profitabil­ity. —AFP

 ??  ?? BERLIN: Participan­ts of the Daimler general meeting look at a Mercedes-Benz Vision Van on display in the CityCube exhibition in Berlin, Germany, yesterday. — AP
BERLIN: Participan­ts of the Daimler general meeting look at a Mercedes-Benz Vision Van on display in the CityCube exhibition in Berlin, Germany, yesterday. — AP

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