Toronto Star

Germany’s automotive world awaits post-Merkel era

Industry is abuzz if her successor will embrace them or be detached

- CHRISTOPH RAUWALD AND ELISABETH BEHRMANN

At the last Frankfurt car show, German Chancellor Angela Merkel toured the Porsche stand, where she was invited to sit behind the wheel of the new Taycan electric model. She politely declined, sidesteppi­ng the pitfall of publicly endorsing an extravagan­t sports car.

The signature Merkel manoeuvre — a rapid risk review followed by a wry response — underscore­d her complicate­d relationsh­ip with a key industry that for the longest time has relied on the political patronage from the country’s chancellor­s.

As Merkel prepares to leave office after 16 years, automotive executives are left wondering what to expect from her successor, less than three weeks before general elections that remain a wide-open contest. Will it be detachment or endorsemen­t? Maybe even open confrontat­ion with a environmen­tally minded government pushing carmakers and their suppliers to embrace change more emphatical­ly or risk being sidelined.

Merkel makes her final visit to a car show today before she leaves office following the Sept. 26 vote. In the Munich halls that she will tour, the air of change is palpable. There’s a vast space dedicated to bicycles, electric vehicles are the norm rather than exotic experiment­s, and climate neutrality has eclipsed horse power as the exhibitors’ buzz words. It sends a message to any politician seeking to play a role in the next government that there’s a fine line between supporting a key industry and protecting the environmen­t.

After a relatively slow start, carmakers from BMW AG to Daimler AG to Volkswagen AG are now embracing the electric future head-on. At the show, BMW announced it’s practicall­y doubling its battery-cell order as demand for electric cars booms; Daimler showed off its new EQE sedan that will take its 40 billion-euro ($59.9 billion) battery push to a wider clientele, while Volkswagen unveiled the design for a small electric car targeting urban buyers.

“There are a lot of things happening at the same time: regionaliz­ation, digitizati­on, a number of different drive trains,” said BMW CEO Oliver Zipse, referring to combustion and electric engines. “BMW is able to handle complexity. The ability to handle complexity is the cornerston­e of our strategy. We’re not afraid of the future.”

Germany is set to have the highest adoption rate of electric vehicles among European countries, with more than 90 per cent of new car sales forecast to be electric by 2040, according to Bloom bergNEF’s Long-Term Electric Vehicle Outlook. Germany’s EV market is projected to reach 3.4 million annual sales by then, thanks to high purchasing power, policy support and a broad offering from domestic automakers.

For Robert Bosch AG, the world’s largest car-parts supplier, the next government’s focus should be on existing goals rather than on establishi­ng new ones.

“Stop formulatin­g new targets, and instead implement the first steps in order to show how these targets can be reached, because they are already very, very ambitious,” CEO Volkmar Denner said at the show.

Besides, greener mobility requires huge outlays, which is why the automotive sector will continue to need support to grow, he said.

For now though, the car industry, a cornerston­e of Germany’s postwar rise as a global manufactur­ing powerhouse, remains at a crossroads. Gasoline prices have spiked in recent months, pushing up the cost of driving. Inner-city congestion has intensifie­d as corona virus wary commuters switched from public transport to their personal vehicles. And electric charging infrastruc­ture remains patchy at best, discouragi­ng consumers from making the switch.

The broad political debate surroundin­g this year’s election has been about climate protection and future technologi­es. That pledge was brought into sharp contrast with the deadly floodings in western Germany in July as well as other natural disasters around the world that have brought the real threat of global warming to public attention.

Daimler CEO Ola Kaellenius expects the next government to pursue a “combinatio­n of a high ambition in climate protection and a similarly high ambition in economic prosperity.”

The government’s uneasy relationsh­ip with the industry on display last year when the state unveiled a massive 130 billioneur­o recovery package. Unlike in the aftermath of the financial crisis, when the powerful automotive sector received financial aid in the form of purchase incentives, no money was allocated to combustion-engine vehicles this time. Instead, buyers of battery-powered cars got bigger subsidies.

Judging by current polls, the CDU party that Merkel has led for close to two decades risks a stinging defeat at the end of the month and could be ejected from power for the first time in 16 years. There’s also a good chance that the Green party will be part of the next government.

That stands to complicate the relationsh­ip with the car industry that’s long been regarded as antiquated by the party’s young, eco-conscious and urban voters. Annalena Baerbock, the Green’s chancellor candidate, has suggested the state should subsidize hulking loadbearin­g bicycles rather than industries past their prime.

In response, the main headline in Germany’s bestsellin­g tabloid Bild-Zeitung screamed “Fear For Our Car” this weekend, lamenting that a mainstay of the country’s freedom and prosperity is under threat from high fuel prices and political meddling.

“Regardless of which constellat­ion the next government will have, climate change must play a role and prosperity must play a role,” Audi CEO Markus Duesmann told reporters ahead of the Munich show.

Either way, the scale of disruption will be significan­t, McKinsey said in a report ahead of the show. Research institutes and labour unions like IG Metall estimate more than 100,000 jobs will change in the German automotive industry by 2030. That’s as much as 10 times the scale of jobs compared with the phase-out of coal power that Germany announced for 2038, McKinsey said.

Some political parties are advocating a gradual move toward new technologi­es rather than a rapid abolition of the combustion engine. Speaking in a Bloomberg webinar last week, the head of the FDP liberal party, Christian Lindner, said the combustion engine still has a future that shouldn’t be dismissed outright.

“We’re a nation of engineers and should develop superior technologi­es,” Lindner said.

“Regardless of which constellat­ion the next government will have, climate change must play a role and prosperity must play a role.”

MARKUS DUESMANN AUDI CEO

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