New Era

Renault reorganise­s towards electric future

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PARIS - French automaker Renault presented its green revamp to investors Tuesday, splitting its operations in two: a new electric vehicle unit and a subsidiary for thermal and hybrid assets that will pair up with China’s Geely.

The electric vehicle market is expected to grow rapidly in response to consumers’ worries about climate change, putting pressure on manufactur­ers to develop less polluting products.

The European Union last month agreed to phase out new CO2-emitting vehicles by 2035, a move set to turbocharg­e the production of electric prototypes on the continent.

At an investor day in Paris on Tuesday, Renault outlined its green transforma­tion.

The carmaker’s flagship division following the reorganisa­tion will be Ampere, which will produce electric vehicles and employ around 10 000 staff in France.

Renault plans to invite investment in Ampere but would remain the majority shareholde­r. Ampere is being prepared for an initial public offering on the Euronext Paris in the latter half of 2023, Renault said.

Renault also intends to combine its technologi­cal, manufactur­ing and research and developmen­t activities for its hybrid and internalco­mbustion vehicles with Chinese automaker Geely in a new entity, “Horse”.

The groups will share the division to design, develop, produce and sell components and systems for hybrid and internal-combustion vehicles, employing 19 000 people across Europe, China and South America.

“We are designing an agile and innovative organisati­on to manage the volatility and accelerate­d technologi­cal evolution of our time,” said Renault CEO Luca de Meo. Investors on Monday expressed their interest in Renault’s transforma­tion, with the group’s shares climbing 3.77% on the Paris stock market.

The company suffered a historic loss in 2020 and its recovery was destabilis­ed by its withdrawal from Russia following Moscow’s invasion of Ukraine.

The value of traditiona­l car manufactur­ers pales in comparison to new players on the market specialisi­ng in electric vehicles such as Elon Musk’s Tesla or Chinese firm BYD.

Renault still needs large investment to accelerate its electric transforma­tion, according to plans it presented in 2020. US giant Ford has taken similar steps, announcing the creation of the “Ford Model E” earlier this year.

Renault’s sales of traditiona­l internal combustion vehicles are falling. In the first nine months of 2022, hybrid and electric vehicles represente­d 38% of the brand’s registrati­ons in Europe, a year-on-year increase of 12%.

The planned separation of Renault’s electric and convention­al production has concerned trade unions after several waves of job cuts.

 ?? Photo: Contribute­d ?? Electric… French automaker Renault CEO Luca de Meo announced splitting operations into a new electric vehicle unit and an internal combustion engine division with China’s Geely.
Photo: Contribute­d Electric… French automaker Renault CEO Luca de Meo announced splitting operations into a new electric vehicle unit and an internal combustion engine division with China’s Geely.

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