The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Late to the party, German carmakers join race against Tesla

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FRANKFURT AM MAIN: After years watching Tesla’s electric cars speed ahead while they have been on the defensive over an industry-wide diesel emissions scandal, German highend manufactur­ers have finally unveiled their first challenger­s to the California­n upstart.

Mercedes-Benz maker Daimler, BMW and Volkswagen’s Audi and Porsche subsidiari­es between them control some 80 per cent of the worldwide premium car market. But until recently they offered little battery-powered, zero-emission competitio­n to Tesla and its bombastic chief executive Elon Musk.

That changed this month, with all three groups unveiling their first all-electric SUVs slated for release over the next two years.

Audi rolled out its ‘E-Tron’, BMW its ‘iNext’ and Mercedes its ‘EQC’, while Porsche presented an electric coupe, the ‘Mission E’.

In total, German carmakers have vowed a total of almost 40 billion euros (US$46.7 billion) of investment in battery-powered vehicles in the coming three years, industry associatio­n VDA says.

With a market share of around eight per cent in Germany – compared with Tesla’s 0.1 per cent – Audi hopes electric cars will account for around one in three sales by 2025.

“Finally, it’s getting started!” auto industry expert Ferdinand Dudenhoeff­er told AFP.

Time is pressing, as sales of engines powered by automakers’ longtime growth driver diesel have plummeted in the face of plans by many large cities to ban them to bring down air pollution. Wild ride for Tesla

Theentranc­eofthethre­eGerman behemoths into the electric race is far more consequent­ial for Tesla than smaller fish like Britain’s Jaguar, whose ‘I-PACE’ is already on sale in the UK.

The US tech firm faces major hurdles of its own, struggling to stem losses that have been going on for years while trying to reassure investors and customers of its chief executive’s mental health.

Musk was filmed drinking whisky and smoking cannabis (which is legal in California) with radio host Joe Rogan earlier this month, and in August revealed he was suffering from intense stress and fatigue in an interview with the New York Times.

On Tuesday, Tesla confirmed that the US Department of Justice was investigat­ing the company over Musk’s tweet announcing a plan to remove its shares from the stock market.

Also on Twitter, the South African entreprene­ur admitted Tuesday that after months spent overcoming “production hell” on the firm’s mass-market Model 3, it was now in “delivery logistics hell” struggling to get cars to buyers – while promising “rapid progress”.

For expert Dudenhoeff­er, “Tesla is the market leader and has great strength in innovation, but the coming six to nine months will be a decisive test” for its chief executive.

“If he doesn’t manage to stabilise the Model 3 and make the firm profitable, it will get very complicate­d for him, including with regard to his investors.” Battery gamble

The German government hopes to see one million fully electric and hybrid vehicles on the road by 2022, up from fewer than 100,000 at the start of this year.

But the spread of the technology is constraine­d by a number of factors, including a limited range of models for sale, slow expansion of charging infrastruc­ture and limited capacity for building new batteries.

A government commission on electric mobility recently found Germany would need to increase the number of charging points available more than five-fold to serve a million drivers.

And while they are perfecting electric motors and other electricdr­ive components, German carmakers have so far balked at direct investment in costly battery production, aware that they would have to catch up on a head start enjoyed by Asian industry leaders and unwilling to gamble on an adventure in the unfamiliar territory of cell chemistry.

European Commission­er Maros Sefcovic said recently that the EU should be open to state aid for a longhoped-for “Airbus of batteries”, while business daily Handelsbla­tt reported the German economy ministry is cobbling together a consortium of companies and research institutes. For now the most conspicuou­s progress comes from China’s CATL.

The challenger for global battery leadership against the alliance of Japanese Panasonic and Tesla announced in July a mammoth new factory in central Germany to supply European customers. — AFP

Tesla is the market leader and has great strength in innovation, but the coming six to nine months will be a decisive test. Ferdinand Dudenhoeff­er, auto industry expert

 ??  ?? The CEO of German carmaker Audi AG, Rupert Stadler poses next to an Audi e-tron prototype car prior to the company’s annual press conference its headquarte­rs in Ingolstadt, southern Germany. In total, German carmakers have vowed a total of almost 40 billion euros (US$46.7 billion) of investment in battery-powered vehicles in the coming three years, industry associatio­n VDA says. — AFP photo
The CEO of German carmaker Audi AG, Rupert Stadler poses next to an Audi e-tron prototype car prior to the company’s annual press conference its headquarte­rs in Ingolstadt, southern Germany. In total, German carmakers have vowed a total of almost 40 billion euros (US$46.7 billion) of investment in battery-powered vehicles in the coming three years, industry associatio­n VDA says. — AFP photo
 ??  ?? Elon Musk, the co-founder and chief executive of Electric carmaker Tesla, speaks during a ceremony in Dubai. After years watching Tesla’s electric cars speed ahead while they have been on the defensive over an industry-wide diesel emissions scandal, German high-end manufactur­ers have finally unveiled their first challenger­s to the California­n upstart. — AFP photo
Elon Musk, the co-founder and chief executive of Electric carmaker Tesla, speaks during a ceremony in Dubai. After years watching Tesla’s electric cars speed ahead while they have been on the defensive over an industry-wide diesel emissions scandal, German high-end manufactur­ers have finally unveiled their first challenger­s to the California­n upstart. — AFP photo
 ??  ?? The Mercedes-Benz Conept EQ A car is seen on display at the Mercedes presentati­on as an Asia premier during the Tokyo Motor Show in Tokyo. — AFP photo
The Mercedes-Benz Conept EQ A car is seen on display at the Mercedes presentati­on as an Asia premier during the Tokyo Motor Show in Tokyo. — AFP photo

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