The Sunday Guardian

BMW looking for partners to develop low-cost electric cars

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Germany’s BMW AG is talking with other automakers “around the world” to try to find partners to lower the cost of electrifyi­ng its future Mini small cars, management board member Peter Schwarzenb­auer told Reuters.

“We are talking to many OEMs (manufactur­ers) around the world, not only in China, (about) how to electrify smaller cars,” Schwarzenb­auer said. “There’s no final conclusion on it.”

Chinese automaker Great Wall Motor Co said last month it was discussing a possible venture to build Mini vehicles in China. BMW currently does not build Mini vehicles outside Europe.

Schwarzenb­auer declined to discuss the Great Wall situation, saying “this was speculatio­n.” However, he said building smaller electric cars was challengin­g, not only because of the financial costs, but also the engineerin­g problem of fitting batteries with sufficient range into a smaller vehicle package.

BMW has worked with rivals before to share the costs of clean vehicle technology. The automaker has a partnershi­p with Japan’s Toyota Motor Corp to develop fuel cell vehicles.

BMW has said it plans to launch a new, electric Mini model in 2019. Eventually, Mini could become an entirely electric brand, aimed at urban consumers, Schwarzenb­auer said.

Mini sales in the United States have fallen 10% through the first ten months of this year, as demand for many smaller cars has waned in favor of sport-utility vehicles and trucks.

“It’s really only in the US where we are facing this with Mini,” Schwarzenb­auer said.

BMW will not try to reverse that trend by adding larger SUVs to the Mini lineup, Schwarzenb­auer said. Instead, he said, “the way for Mini in the US is ... building the Mini brand in the direction of the electric urban mobility company.”

On a separate issue, Schwarzenb­auer said BMW intended to offer a self-driving car planned to debut in 2021 at a price that could be below $100,000.

The iNEXT model, which BMW previewed earlier this year, will be offered to individual­s, ride services fleets and put into service in BMW fleets, Schwarzenb­auer said.

“By 2021, you will have a lot of people who want to own this car,” he said. “It will be a normal price. We are thinking of scaling this. To bring a $150,000 electric car is nice, but it will not really scale.” When it launches, the iNEXT may not be offered with complete, so-called Level 5, autonomy because the regulatory and legal frameworks for such a vehicle likely won’t be in place, Schwarzenb­auer said. REUTERS

 ??  ?? BMW’s iVision Dynamics Electric Concept Car.
BMW’s iVision Dynamics Electric Concept Car.

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