Cape Times

Ferrari quietly – very quietly – tests its silent electric car

- Tommaso Ebhardt

TWO YEARS ago, Sergio Marchionne dubbed the notion of a Ferrari that can run without the aggressive growl of its 12-cylinder engines “obscene.” Today, it’s a reality.

Marchionne, Ferrari’s chief executive, says the supercar manufactur­er has been quietly – very quietly – testing a petrol-electric hybrid car “you could run silently” at a track near its headquarte­rs in the northern Italian town of Maranello.

A video posted on YouTube last month shows a car at the Ferrari track making no sound as it accelerate­s from a full stop.

While Ferrari has no plans to produce a full-electric car before 2022, the company is developing vehicles that will show “the full power of electrific­ation,” Marchionne said.

Next year, Ferrari will start offering the technology in a sports car, its first model that can run entirely on battery power for any significan­t distance.

The hybrid engine will soon be an option on all new models, and from 2020 the carmaker will use it as the sole drivetrain for its first sport-utility vehicle, which Marchionne says will be the fastest SUV on the market.

Analysts expect Ferrari to boost annual production to almost 15 000 cars, from 9 000 last year.

The expansion will focus on attracting wealthy customers who might not buy a screaming sports car that can top 200 miles per hour (322km/h), but would pay more than $300 000 for a distinctiv­e luxury ride they can take to the office or on a weekend trip to the countrysid­e.

Ferrari’s growing interest in electric motors mirrors the strategies of many of its high-performanc­e rivals.

Porsche next year plans to introduce its first all-electric sports car, a coupé called the Mission E.

Aston Martin will start selling an electric version of the Rapide in 2019.

And Bentley in March introduced a hybrid version of its Bentayga SUV and says that by 2025 all its vehicles will offer some sort of electric drive train.

Since 2013, Ferrari has built about 700 LaFerraris, a supercar costing as much as $2.1 million that combines a pair of electric motors with a 12-cylinder petrol engine to boost accelerati­on (and in a pinch can travel a few hundred metres on batteries alone).

The technology, developed for Formula One racing, delivers 963 horsepower – more than any previous Ferrari model – while cutting fuel consumptio­n by as much as 40 percent.

 ?? PHOTO: BLOOMBERG ?? A Ferrari LaFerrari Aperta vehicle parked in front of the New York Stock Exchange. Sergio Marchionne confirmed that Ferrari NV has been testing a petrol-electric hybrid car.
PHOTO: BLOOMBERG A Ferrari LaFerrari Aperta vehicle parked in front of the New York Stock Exchange. Sergio Marchionne confirmed that Ferrari NV has been testing a petrol-electric hybrid car.

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