The Philippine Star

Global carmakers driving up $90-B spending for e-vehicles

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DETROIT (Reuters) — Ford Motor Co.’s plan to double its spending on electric vehicle is part of an investment tsunami in batteries and electric cars by global automakers that now totals $90 billion and is still growing, a Reuters analysis shows.

That money is pouring in to a tiny sector that amounts to less than one percent of the 90 million vehicles sold each year and where Elon Musk’s Tesla Inc., with sales of only three models totaling just over 100,000 vehicles in 2017, was a dominant player.

With the world’s top automakers poised to introduce dozens of new battery electric and hybrid gasoline–electric models over the next five years – many of them in China – executives continue to ask: Who will buy all those vehicles?

“We’re all in,” Ford Motor Executive Chairman Bill Ford Jr. said of the company’s $11 billion investment, announced on Sunday at the North American Internatio­nal Auto Show in Detroit. “The only question is, will the customers be there with us?”

“Tesla faces real competitio­n,” said Mike Jackson, chief executive of AutoNation Inc., the largest US auto retailing chain. By 2030, Jackson said he expects electric vehicles could account for 15–20 percent of New vehicle sales in the United States.

Investment­s in electrifie­d vehicles announced to date include at least $19 billion by automakers in the United States, $21 billion in China and $52 billion in Germany.

But US and German auto executives said in interviews on the sidelines of the Detroit auto show that the bulk of those investment­s are earmarked for China, where the government has enacted escalating electric– vehicle quotas starting in 2019.

Mainstream automakers also are reacting in part to pressure from regulators in Europe and California to slash carbon emissions from fossil fuels. They are under pressure as well from Tesla’s success in creating electric sedans and SUVs that inspire would–be owners to flood the company with orders.

While Tesla is the most prominent electric car maker, “soon it will be everybody and his brother,” Daimler AG Chief Executive Dieter Zetsche told reporters on Monday at the Detroit show.

Daimler has said it will spend at least $11.7 billion to introduce 10 pure electric and 40 hybrid models, and that it intends to electrify its full range of vehicles, from minicompac­t commuters to heavy–duty trucks.

“We will see whether demand will drive our (electric vehicle) sales or whether we will all be trying to catch the last customer out there,” Zetsche said. “Ultimately, the customer will decide.”

 ?? REUTERS ?? Visitors look at cars in the Ford booth at the North American Internatio­nal Auto Show in Detroit, Michigan.
REUTERS Visitors look at cars in the Ford booth at the North American Internatio­nal Auto Show in Detroit, Michigan.

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