Business Day - Motor News

Charging into the new era for sports cars

TECHNOLOGY/ All-electric supercar plans for Porsche shared with Audi and Lamborghin­i, writes Michael Taylor

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German premium brand Porsche won’t abandon its roots in the switch to battery power and is already developing all-electric sports and supercars. Its all-new battery-electric sports car architectu­re, dubbed SPE, will headline the “third wave” of the Volkswagen Group’s electrific­ation strategy, arriving after 2025.

The existence of the new SPE programme was revealed in a presentati­on the group delivered to investors. It is believed to be based around solid-state battery technology to save space and increase range and will have the option of two, three or even four electric motors.

The presentati­on showed the group aiming to unseat the Renault-Nissan-Mitsubishi alliance for e-mobility leadership before the middle of the next decade. The strategy then goes on to target world e-mobility leadership by 2030. The company’s e-mobility charge will begin its “first wave” in 2019 with the volume MEB (modular electric architectu­re) for the Volkswagen, Skoda and Seat brands. VW will lead the charge with the ID Hatch, which is Golfsized on the outside but Passatsize­d inside.

Porsche’s first battery electric vehicle (BEV) effort, the Mission E, won’t sit on any of the allnew platforms, but will instead use the J1 architectu­re it has already developed. Audi’s first BEVs will come from both the J1 and the even-earlier C-BEV platform, which was the first premium BEV platform developed inside the VW Group.

The “second wave” will be

THE SPE PROGRAMME REVEALED TO INVESTORS IS BELIEVED TO BE BASED AROUND SOLID-STATE BATTERY TECHNOLOGY TO SAVE SPACE AND INCREASE RANGE

the all-new premium PPE architectu­re in 2021, developed jointly by Porsche and Audi.

This architectu­re will sit beneath all new BEV Audis, Lamborghin­is (including the second-generation Urus and an unnamed sports sedan), Bentleys and Porsches.

And then will come the sports cars and supercars, giving the VW Group three purpose-built battery-electric car architectu­res within the next seven years.

It should also take some of the heat out of the turf wars between Porsche and Audi, which have been at loggerhead­s over the futures of the 911 and the R8.

Porsche has demanded Audi switch the next version of its mid-engined R8 supercar (and, therefore, Lamborghin­i’s next Huracan) to its 911 platform, though Audi Sport has pushed back, hard. Sources insist that uncompromi­sing stances over the “engineerin­g folly” of a front fuel tank location cost Audi Sport engineerin­g head Stephan Reil and its president Stephan Winkelmann their jobs.

Yet the VW Group has shown faith in Porsche’s engineerin­g, partly because of lingering Dieselgate effects and partly because Porsche is already seen as an electrific­ation leader inside the group. More than half of its European Panameras are hybrids, while it expects more than half of all its cars to be electrifie­d by 2025.

The SPE already has two confirmed body styles and sizes within Porsche, including a cheaper two-seat convertibl­e, and at least two roles within Audi.

It could also go a long way towards making Lamborghin­i’s Terzo Millennio concept car a reality. Though it wouldn’t have the concept’s all-carbon layout, the SPE platform has been engineered to cope with both the upper and lower ends of Lamborghin­i’s supercar range.

 ??  ?? Porsche’s Mission E will not be the only electrifie­d sports car within the Volkswagen Group. Below left: Details of the Volkswagen Group electrific­ation strategy timetable show a big focus on e-mobility by 2030.
Porsche’s Mission E will not be the only electrifie­d sports car within the Volkswagen Group. Below left: Details of the Volkswagen Group electrific­ation strategy timetable show a big focus on e-mobility by 2030.
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