Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Europe’s carmakers hitting the gas on electric vehicles

- DAVID McHUGH

PARIS — European carmakers are rolling out electric vehicles like the ones on view this week at the Paris Motor Show to burnish their reputation­s as technology leaders and to compete with Tesla, but also because EU regulation­s don’t leave them much choice.

New emission standards mean Europe will soon see an upsurge in electric offerings, outpacing the United States, where the regulatory push has eased under the Trump administra­tion, but still likely lagging China, where the government is mandating more e-cars.

The new rules could in-

crease sales of electrics in Europe from a minuscule 0.6 percent of the 14.5 million vehicle annual market to the high single digits over the next five or six years. From about 10 available models there would be several dozen to choose from.

Many questions remain, not least the availabili­ty of public, fast-charging stations to match Tesla’s proprietar­y network. And customers, especially those aiming to get the most for their money, may think electrics are virtuous enough in theory — but in practice don’t buy them because they cost more, and because reliable places to charge up away from home remain scarce.

At the Paris show, Daimler’s Mercedes-Benz is showing off the EQC, while Volkswagen’s Audi has the e-tron, both battery-powered. They should be on the streets in the next few months, the e-tron this year and the EQC in 2019. PSA Group’s luxury brand, DS, is showing off the DS 3 Crossback, a compact SUV that will offer an all-electric version from the second half of 2019. Volkswagen will follow in 2020 with its ID electric four-door compact. BMW already makes the i3 compact and plans an electric version of its X3 SUV in 2020.

Automakers are obviously trying to grab some of the buzz Tesla earned with its Model X SUV and Model S high-performanc­e sedan.

But the European Union’s collective effort to cut the output of greenhouse gases also weighs heavily in the automakers’ plans.

They must cut average emissions of CO2 for new cars sold in Europe from the 2015 goal of 130 grams of CO2 per driven kilometer to 95 grams per kilometer in 2021, or pay heavy fines. Last year, average emissions actually crept up, to 118.5 grams per kilometer from 118.1 grams. One reason is plunging sales of diesels, hit by Volkswagen’s scandal over cheating on emissions tests. Diesels can emit more nitrogen oxide, which is bad for people’s health, but less CO2.

The automakers are moving ahead even though current sales are tiny, saying that if the vehicles are attractive enough, demand will come.

“You just have to walk through the show to see that the offers are increasing­ly arriving at the dealers,” said Daimler CEO Dieter Zetsche at the Paris event.

Carlos Tavares, the CEO of France’s PSA Group, said it was impossible to predict the future mix of sales between gasoline, diesel, electric and plug-in hybrid cars, which start out electric but have gasoline motors to charge the battery if needed.

The industry easily reached a 2015 emissions goal of 130 grams of CO2 per kilometer by improving the efficiency of gasoline and diesel engines. Automakers expected to make the 2021 goal with a combinatio­n of diesel engines — which are 15-20 percent more efficient than gasoline engines — more efficient gasoline engines, and plug-in hybrids.

Then came diesel-gate. Volkswagen’s admission in September 2015 that it had rigged diesel engines to cheat on U.S. emissions tests led to a wide-ranging examinatio­n of all diesels — and the discovery that many of them emitted far more pollutants on the road than in testing. There was talk of banning older diesels from some cities, and of ending the subsidies for diesel fuel that helped propel sales. Diesel’s market share in Europe fell from 50 percent on the eve of the scandal to 36 percent in July.

Ferdinand Dudenhoeff­er, director of the Center for Automotive Research at the University of Duisburg-Essen, estimates that BMW will need to sell 93,000 electric cars per year to avoid fines, while Daimler’s Mercedes and Smart brands will need 101,000 and Volkswagen a whopping 347,000 in sales. That compares with the 65,700 sold by all carmakers in the EU last year.

To meet the emissions limit, the industry needs a “systematic ramp-up of electric cars from the year 2020” that would hit a market share of 9 percent and 1.45 million vehicles by 2023, he said.

That would likely put Europe well ahead of the United States, where the environmen­tal regulatory push has eased. U.S. President Donald Trump’s administra­tion has proposed trimming mileage requiremen­ts for 2021-26 initially put forward by the Obama administra­tion, and has proposed withdrawin­g California’s right to regulate emissions. California has pushed for more electric autos, and its size gives it clout.

Europe may still lag behind China, where the government is mandating that electric cars make up a bigger part of the market. Currently the U.S. market share for electric cars is 0.6 percent; in China it’s 1.8 percent.

“With dieselgate, the switch to electric cars has accelerate­d,” Dudenhoeff­er wrote in an analysis. “Without pure electric cars … the regulation requiremen­ts cannot be met.”

Research group IHS Markit predicts that battery vehicles’ EU market share will hit 4.8 percent by 2021 and 9.3 percent in 2024.

 ?? AP/MICHEL EULER ?? Journalist­s check out a Mercedes-Benz EQC luxury electric SUV during a media presentati­on Monday on the eve of the Paris Motor Show.
AP/MICHEL EULER Journalist­s check out a Mercedes-Benz EQC luxury electric SUV during a media presentati­on Monday on the eve of the Paris Motor Show.

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