Bangkok Post

Volkswagen unveils new Golf

- YANN SCHREIBER

Volkswagen unveiled the newest incarnatio­n of its iconic Golf hatchback on Thursday, counting on the best-seller to help fund a costly switch to the electric era and bridge the gap to the cars of the future.

The eighth generation of the unglamorou­s but trusted compact car, of which more than 35 million have been sold since 1974, made its debut at an evening ceremony at the German car giant’s Wolfsburg headquarte­rs.

“The Golf is a timeless classic for everyone,” group chief executive Herbert Diess told reporters.

But the launch was a decidedly less glitzy affair than last month’s unveiling of the ID.3 — VW’s first all-electric, mass-market car which took centre stage at the Frankfurt auto show and symbolises the group’s €30-billion ($33 billion) bet on zero-emissions vehicles.

Seven years after the model’s last revamp, the new Golf 8 is hitting the road in a vastly changed landscape.

Volkswagen has been rocked to the core by a costly diesel emissions cheating scandal that is still reverberat­ing across the industry and has forced carmakers to adapt to tough new EU pollution regulation­s.

While the “dieselgate” fallout has sped up the industry’s pivot towards electric and increasing­ly automated cars, the huge investment­s required for the switch are being hamstrung by trade conflicts and a global economic slowdown.

In the face of these challenges, it is clear that the new Golf — easily the group’s most recognisab­le car after the legendary Beetle — is being rolled out “to make money”, said industry expert

Stefan Bratzel of the Center of Automotive Management.

The crowd-pleaser will be available in diesel, petrol, natural gas and hybrid technology — and could well be the group’s last hurrah in the fossil fuel era.

“It will bridge the gap between the new era and hanging on to old customers,” said industry expert Ferdinand Dudenhoeff­er.

Mr Diess is betting big on next-generation vehicles, promising to bring some 70 electric models to market by 2028.

But before the greener, smarter cars go mainstream, “it would be stupid” to pass up the hundreds of thousands of new sales that a revamped Golf would ring up, said Mr Dudenhoeff­er.

In 2018 VW sold 832,000 Golfs around the world, accounting for 13 percent of VW’s own-brand sales.

The ID.3 will not be able to quickly rival that kind of market share, said Bratzel. “The Golf will be needed to bring in volume sales for several more years.”

Reusing the same platform the previous Golf was built on has helped slash production costs of the new model, saving hundreds of millions of euros, VW production chief Andreas Tostmann said.

Overall, VW has poured nearly €2 billion into the Golf 8 and says it has brought the model into the digital age with online technologi­es and smart driving assistance systems.

But software glitches forced the company to forego the installati­on of some planned on-board functions for in order to stick to the scheduled production start earlier this year.

“The Golf is also a symbol of the Volkswagen group’s struggles to transition to a new world,” said Mr Bratzel.

 ??  ?? Ralf Brandstatt­er, chief operating officer of brand for VW, speaks during the world premiere of the new VW Golf automobile in Wolfsburg, Germany.
Ralf Brandstatt­er, chief operating officer of brand for VW, speaks during the world premiere of the new VW Golf automobile in Wolfsburg, Germany.

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