Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

VW invests in digital autobahn

German carmakers go own tech way, bypass Silicon Valley

- JACK EWING AND MARK SCOTT

WOLFSBURG, Germany — One of the first things Ole Harms did after taking over Volkswagen’s new ride-hailing startup was leave town.

Staid Wolfsburg, Volkswagen’s home, was not the best place for the automaker to mount a defense against Silicon Valley challenger­s keen to upend the car industry, and he needed to move.

“Nobody knows how the world is going to look” in the coming years, said Harms, a bearded 41-year-old dressed in a gray cardigan over a crisply pressed white shirt. “The biggest skill you have to have is the ability to change.”

So he packed up and took his team to Berlin, where increasing­ly urgent attempts to tap into a growing tech scene are part of German carmakers’ efforts to ride a digital wave sweeping the industry — before it rolls straight over them.

Autonomous driving, electric cars and ride-hailing apps from Silicon Valley, like Uber, are reshaping transporta­tion. Young people no longer feel as compelled as previous generation­s to own cars. And Wall Street shows scant respect for automakers and their global manufactur­ing prowess: The market value of Google, which is building a driverless car, is more than double that of BMW, Daimler and Volkswagen combined.

At stake is the fate of the German economy, Europe’s largest, at a time when the region is only beginning to emerge from a decadelong economic malaise. Germany, in particular, is as dependent on its carmakers as Michigan is on Chrysler, Ford and General Motors.

Non-German carmakers have readily embraced Silicon Valley through partnershi­ps and investment deals. Fiat Chrysler, for instance, is working with Google on self-driving cars. General Motors has poured $500 million into Lyft, the ridebookin­g service. And Volvo, the Swedish automaker owned by Geely of China, provided the chassis for Uber’s recent driverless car tests.

By contrast, Germany’s automotive giants have favored a more confrontat­ional approach.

That has been backed by many locals, who have so far rebuffed Uber’s aggressive local expansion plans that have often run roughshod over domestic regulation, and by German politician­s eager to please some of the country’s biggest employers.

BMW, for example, is working with the chipmaker Intel and Mobileye, an Israeli tech company, to develop a self-driving car of its own by early in the next decade. It has also formed a partnershi­p with IBM to use artificial intelligen­ce to allow vehicles to automatica­lly adapt to their owners’ preference­s.

To combat the likes of Tesla, the California electric automaker, BMW is planning to expand its i Series line of battery-powered and hybrid vehicles. Since 2014, it has sold 100,000 of the i3 model, which runs on batteries and has a lightweigh­t carbonfibe­r body.

Daimler, the maker of Mercedes-Benz cars and trucks, has similarly been investing in digital alternativ­es. Of the three automakers, it has also been the only one so far to become an active partner with Uber, albeit in a limited deal where it provides a set of its autonomous vehicles to the ride service.

The German carmakers’ digital plans have led to increased collaborat­ion between what have long been staunch rivals.

In 2015, BMW, Daimler and Volkswagen’s Audi unit joined forces to buy Here, a digital mapping unit of Nokia, for about $3 billion. While not a household name, the Berlinbase­d company provides about 80 percent of the built-in navigation systems for cars in North America and Europe, and is the only large-scale competitor to Google Maps.

“The future of Germany as an industrial nation depends on how companies succeed in bringing the manufactur­ing and digital worlds together,” said Frank Ridder, research leader for Germany, Austria and Switzerlan­d for Gartner, a technology research firm.

Taken together, the carmakers’ digital reboot is aimed at rejuvenati­ng Germany’s vaunted industrial base. About one-fifth of jobs in Germany are in manufactur­ing, double the portion in the United States.

But factory jobs as a percentage of total employment have been declining for years, prompting the government to dole out hundreds of millions of euros in research and developmen­t funds to meld traditiona­l manufactur­ing with the latest technology.

The initiative, called Industry 4.0, reflects a dawning realizatio­n that Germany’s historic success may not necessaril­y help the country thrive in a smartphone-centric world.

The experience of Volkswagen is a case in point. The company, which is still dealing with its emissions cheating scandal, is the world’s biggest automaker, but was the slowest of the three to embrace the digital age, and is now trying to catch up.

That is where Harms comes in.

A former consultant at Capgemini, he joined the carmaker in 2008 and is now chief executive of MOIA, a new Volkswagen service that sits somewhere between ride-hailing services and traditiona­l city bus networks.

Unlike Uber, which has often run into resistance from officials in Europe, MOIA plans to cooperate with local government­s and act as an extension of existing public transporta­tion networks. Instead of lumbering buses following fixed routes, Harms said, MOIA shuttles will adjust their destinatio­ns and schedules according to customer demand. The vehicles will be electric, and in the future, some may be self-driving.

MOIA has yet to sign any deals, but it is negotiatin­g with cities including Hamburg and Berlin. It hopes to expand quickly into the United States and China.

In smaller cities, Harms said, MOIA could offer an inexpensiv­e form of public transporta­tion, even though rivals like Uber and Didi Chuxing, a Chinese ride-hailing service, are already well establishe­d in many of these locations.

“The whole mobility market — transporta­tion as a service — is just at the beginning,” Harms said.

Volkswagen’s recent push into new digital frontiers has taken on added momentum since Matthias Mueller took over as chief executive after the emissions scandal.

Under Mueller, Volkswagen has set a goal of selling at least 2 million electric cars a year by 2025 as it tries to rebuild its image and reduce its dependence on diesel cars. In June, Volkswagen bought a piece of the ride-hailing business by investing $300 million in Gett, a taxihailin­g service.

But for Harms, the carmakers’ best hope of survival is if they can prove the value of owning big factories, even though most previous efforts by the industry — and other traditiona­l sectors — to compete with digital upstarts have proved unsuccessf­ul.

“A vehicle is extremely sensitive. You can’t put out a beta version and then two weeks later an update,” he said. “We are the ones who already know how to do it very well.”

 ?? The New York Times/GORDON WELTERS ?? Ole Harms, the chief executive of MOIA, a ride-hailing startup funded by Volkswagen, moved his team from VW headquarte­rs in Wolfsburg, Germany, to Berlin.
The New York Times/GORDON WELTERS Ole Harms, the chief executive of MOIA, a ride-hailing startup funded by Volkswagen, moved his team from VW headquarte­rs in Wolfsburg, Germany, to Berlin.

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