The Columbus Dispatch

Ford, VW to team on electric, autonomous cars

- By Jack Ewing and Neal E. Boudette The New York Times

FRANKFURT — Ford Motor Co. and Volkswagen are expected to sign an agreement as soon as next week to share the cost of developing autonomous vehicles and producing electric cars, according to two people with knowledge of the discussion­s.

The agreement, likely to be approved by Volkswagen’s supervisor­y board Thursday, deepens an existing alliance between the companies to produce pickup trucks but is much more ambitious. It would be the latest example of how longtime rivals are joining forces during a period of extraordin­ary ferment in the auto industry.

Battery-powered, self-driving cars have the potential to eliminate tailpipe emissions and avoid accidents caused by human error. But a rapid shift toward these technologi­es could be perilous for establishe­d carmakers such as Ford and Volkswagen.

They must invest hundreds of billions of dollars in coming years or risk becoming irrelevant. And they face new competitor­s such as Google and Uber with access to enormous financial resources. Investors have been much more willing to back Silicon Valley companies than the dinosaurs of Detroit or Wolfsburg, Germany, where Volkswagen is based.

The pressure provides a powerful incentive for companies to cooperate. On Thursday, German carmakers BMW and Daimler signed an agreement, which they had previously announced, to jointly develop autonomous driving technology.

The turmoil is already claiming victims. BMW said Friday that Harald Krüger, its chief executive, would not seek reappointm­ent.

In January, Volkswagen and Ford said they would cooperate on producing vans and pickup trucks and dangled the possibilit­y of working together on electric cars and autonomous vehicles.

Now they are close to formalizin­g a deal that would play to Ford’s investment­s in autonomous driving and Volkswagen’s lead in electric cars.

Volkswagen, which sold more vehicles than any other carmaker in the world last year, has declared its intention to be the company that makes electric cars affordable for the masses. The company has begun taking orders for an electric model called the ID.3, which will go on sale next year for about the same price as a Golf diesel.

But Volkswagen is less advanced than Ford in autonomous driving. Under the proposed agreement, Volkswagen would invest in Argo AI, a firm in Pittsburgh that is developing self-driving technology with backing from Ford, the people with knowledge of the deal said. The agreement was first reported by the Frankfurte­r Allgemeine newspaper in Germany.

Ford, which is behind in electric vehicles, would use a platform that Volkswagen has developed for the new generation of cars. The platform consists of standardiz­ed components such as motors, chassis and batteries that can be used as the basis for a variety of vehicles, such as sedans or SUVS.

By using Volkswagen’s platform, Ford can avoid the cost of developing its own. The companies also can save money by purchasing components together.

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