National Post

The big miss on electric cars remaking Europe’s car industry

- Albertina torsoli, stefan nicola And Monica raymunt Bloomberg, with additional reporting from Elisabeth Behrmann and Craig Trudell.

WE’RE VERY OPEN TO SHARE THAT KIND OF INVESTMENT BECAUSE IT’S VERY DIFFICULT TO MAKE MONEY WITH SMALL CARS. WE’RE TRYING TO FIND A WAY.

— LUCA DE MEO, RENAULT SA CHIEF EXECUTIVE

Volkswagen, Renault and Stellantis are thinking the unthinkabl­e, exploring tie-ups with sworn competitor­s to make cheaper electric vehicles and fend off existentia­l threats.

As Chinese rivals and Tesla Inc. expose competitiv­e weaknesses at Europe’s biggest mass-market carmakers, it’s become clear that a sense of urgency is growing and a business-asusual approach is a losing option.

There’s a “perfect recognitio­n that in the future, the companies which are not fit to face the Chinese competitio­n will put themselves in trouble,” Carlos Tavares, chief executive of Stellantis NV — the company created from the 2021 merger of Italy’s Fiat and France’s PSA Group — said in an interview last week. He has previously said that Europe’s auto industry faces a “bloodbath” if it doesn’t adapt.

Pushed by a slowdown in the pace of EV adoption, auto executives are discussing ideas ranging from pooling developmen­t resources to bundling businesses across European borders to better compete in the once-in-a-generation shift. The coming months are crucial.

Rather than muscling aside gas guzzlers, sales of fully electric cars this year are set to grow at the slowest rate since 2019, according to BloombergN­EF, with the unexpected stall in momentum intensifyi­ng competitio­n. Even for Tesla, the slowdown — which has led to widespread discountin­g — has made an impact. A 20 per cent share slump this year has erased about $150 billion from its market capitaliza­tion — more than double VW’S value.

Headwinds for the sector include government­s dropping incentives, rental firms balking at ballooning repair costs and consumers increasing­ly frustrated with climate policies impacting their pocketbook­s. Elections in the U.S. and Europe could further fuel anti-ev sentiment, just as an inflection point approaches.

In 2025, tighter emissions rules come into effect in the European Union, meaning manufactur­ers need to sell more battery-powered cars or face hefty fines. In an unlikely worst-case scenario, Volkswagen AG could face penalties of more than €2 billion ($2.2 billion) if it fails to sufficient­ly reduce fleet emissions, according to Bloomberg calculatio­ns based on company and regulatory data.

As pressure builds on European carmakers to sell more EVS, China’s state-supported manufactur­ers are entering the cooling market with models that are often better and cheaper.

BYD Co.’s Dolphin, for instance, is listed at about €7,000 less than a similarly equipped VW ID.3, which the German carmaker originally pitched as the Beetle of the EV era. The Chinese manufactur­er will underscore its European ambitions by showing off several electric models at the Geneva car show next week, including a luxury SUV rivalling the Mercedes-benz G-class.

Failure for Europe’s carmakers to come up with a working Plan B risks upheaval in an industry that employs some 13 million people and accounts for seven per cent of the EU economy.

“We have spent billions as an industry to make electric mobility possible,” said Holger Klein, the CEO of ZF Friedrichs­hafen AG, a German parts maker that employs around 165,000 people worldwide. “Now the question is: Do we have the right parameters?”

Renault SA CEO Luca de Meo has been advocating an alliance akin to the tieup that created a European plane maker to vie with Boeing Co. by pooling assets in Germany, France, Spain and the UK. The executive has argued that an “Airbus of autos” would help share the massive cost of building cheap EVS, while allowing them to benefit from greater scale.

Interest in broader cost sharing rose late last year, when Renault presented a concept for an electric city car that would cost less than €20,000 — half the price of VW’S ID.3. De Meo’s initiative is inspired by Japan’s kei cars. The popular mini vehicles are built by several manufactur­ers and get preferenti­al treatment from regulators.

Different approaches are emerging. Stellantis’s Tavares has openly discussed an interest in mergers and acquisitio­ns, whereas others are more focused on less-thorny collaborat­ions.

Renault’s de Meo downplayed speculatio­n on a major combinatio­n last week, telling Bloomberg Television that agility is more important than size. He confirmed that talks on a joint EV platform are taking place “left and right.”

“We’re very open to share that kind of investment because it’s very difficult to make money with small cars,” said de Meo, who has previously worked for Volkswagen as well as Fiat. “We’re trying to find a way.”

A shakeup in Europe could spill over to the U.S., where General Motors Co. and Ford Motor Co. also are paring back EV investment and have indicated they’re open to partnershi­ps with peers. President Joe Biden’s administra­tion is considerin­g giving manufactur­ers more time for the shift to electric cars, the New York Times reported over the weekend.

As they’ve dialed back investment plans, traditiona­l carmakers have returned more money to shareholde­rs, indicating a lack of resources isn’t the issue. GM, Ford and Stellantis spent a combined $22.7 billion buying back shares and paying dividends last year, while Renault last week proposed its biggest shareholde­r payout in five years.

It wasn’t supposed to work out this way when the EU approved plans last year to effectivel­y halt the sale of new combustion-engine cars from 2035. There are a number of reasons for souring EV sentiment. Consumers got glitchy software and unexpected­ly high operating expenses. Because of maintenanc­e complexiti­es, insuring an EV costs more than a convention­al vehicle — twice as much in the U.K., for example. But affordabil­ity might be the biggest hurdle for mainstream buyers.

The slump is only expected to be temporary as battery technology and charging infrastruc­ture improve, according to Colin Mckerrache­r, an analyst at BNEF.

Still, the misalignme­nt between expectatio­ns and reality is causing pain. At its electric-car hub in the eastern German city of Zwickau, Volkswagen let go more than 200 temporary workers and cut a shift on one of its assembly lines. While overall passenger-car sales rose 11 per cent in January in Europe, analysts are expecting the share of EVS to broadly stall this year due to consumer apathy.

Unless they can get strategies back on track, Europe’s automakers risk falling further behind, and the effort to meet regulatory rules might mean paying more money to Tesla for emissions credits — handing the company pure profit.

They may have one last shot. VW, Stellantis and Renault are all independen­tly working on models costing €25,000 or less, while Mercedes and BMW plan to roll out several new EVS with improved technology by mid-decade.

The last resort might be appeals for more trade and regulatory protection. The EU is due to review plans to phase out convention­al cars, and manufactur­ers are already preparing a co-ordinated lobbying effort soon after European parliament­ary elections in June, according to people familiar with the matter. The European Commission is investigat­ing the extent to which China has supported its EV industry in a probe that could result in the levying of additional tariffs as early as July.

While delaying the end of the combustion-engine car might offer respite, it won’t fix the competitiv­e issues bogging down Europe’s transition into the electric era.

“Among CEOS and in boardrooms, there’s a lot of nervousnes­s and a lot of wait-and-see in terms of how 2024 pans out,” said Alexandre Marian, a managing director at Alixpartne­rs in Paris.

 ?? KRISZTIAN BOCSI / BLOOMBERG FILES ?? In 2025, tighter emissions rules come into effect in the European Union, meaning manufactur­ers need to sell more battery-powered cars or face hefty fines.
KRISZTIAN BOCSI / BLOOMBERG FILES In 2025, tighter emissions rules come into effect in the European Union, meaning manufactur­ers need to sell more battery-powered cars or face hefty fines.
 ?? GIULIANO BERTI / BLOOMBERG FILES ?? Europe’s auto industry faces a “bloodbath” if it doesn’t adapt, says Carlos Tavares, chief executive of Stellantis NV.
GIULIANO BERTI / BLOOMBERG FILES Europe’s auto industry faces a “bloodbath” if it doesn’t adapt, says Carlos Tavares, chief executive of Stellantis NV.

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