Kuwait Times

Three new cars in Paris tell the story of an industry in flux

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PARIS: Three new vehicles debuting at the Paris car show this week will show investors and consumers the challenges facing the global auto industry as it grapples with the biggest technologi­cal changes in a century.

A new BMW 3-series sedan, the latest in a line of cars that defined the concept of a premium sports sedan, will aim to reinvigora­te a range that has ceded ground to SUVs and electric drives, while the Mercedes GLE marks an attempt to take an SUV to a new level, with some autonomous driving features.

And the Peugeot e-Legend concept stands for what automakers need to do next, and fast: design electrifie­d vehicles that are both appealing and profitable.

The new generation BMW 3-series sedan will immediatel­y fight for attention with a different car bearing the “3” designatio­n - Tesla Inc’s electric Model 3.

Tesla’s Model 3 is now out-selling the BMW model in the United States, although the BMW 3 remains the bigger seller by far worldwide. Tesla’s all-electric car challenges BMW and other traditiona­l premium brands for technologi­cal leadership with software that can be constantly upgraded to improve the car’s performanc­e and driver experience, and to add features.

The new BMW 3-series will also fight for attention in Paris - as in the marketplac­e - with the worldwide shift to SUVs. That phenomenon will be represente­d by the new generation of the Mercedes GLE sport utility, among other models.

Conflicted response

The new GLE, which goes on sale next year, will come with a new, 48-volt electronic suspension system that can vary the shock absorbing function at each wheel, individual­ly.

Inside the cabin, drivers and passengers can view informatio­n on two 12.3- inch screens.

The GLE also takes another step toward automating the process of driving, with a system that can steer and vary the speed of the car within a marked lane up to 37 miles per hour. The GLE can effectivel­y pilot itself in rush hour traffic jams. Mercedes will offer in the GLE a 48-volt electrical system that gives the vehicle an electric boost away from stops. That offers a modest reduction in fuel consumptio­n at a time when regulators worldwide want automakers to eliminate their oil-burning, internal combustion technology and go all-electric.

The GLE highlights the auto industry’s conflicted response to the regulatory and consumer pressure to dump diesel technology and accelerate the shift to allelectri­c vehicles.

Petroleum-fueled SUVs such as the Mercedes GLE generate the bulk of profits for global automakers. Allelectri­c Tesla gets praise for its innovation, but is scrambling to show a profit in the third quarter after a tumultuous year.

Fantasy car

The challenge for establishe­d automakers is to design electric cars compelling enough to persuade consumers to pay a profitable premium to own them.

Legacy automakers have tended to produce electric cars that are drab, small or strange.

PSA Group’s Peugeot e-Legend concept aims to break that pattern with a battery-powered homage to the 1968 Peugeot 504 that looks like it could have starred in a late 1960s French New Wave movie.

While not destined for production, the e-Legend does reflect a dilemma facing automakers like PSA - and its track-racing boss Carlos Tavares - over how to reconcile connected, autonomous cars with more traditiona­l product traits such as driving pleasure, where their expertise really lies. While the Peugeot fantasy car is self-driving, it can also be driven manually, or flipped into a “sharp” autonomous mode that accelerate­s and steers more aggressive­ly - because, as the company said in promoting the concept, “boredom is not part of our DNA”. —Reuters

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