The Oklahoman

Daimler’s trucks, luxury cars to separate

- David McHugh

FRANKFURT, Germany – Shareholde­rs in Daimler AG, maker of Mercedes-Benz luxury cars, on Friday approved the spinoff of the truck division as a separate company.

The move is intended to give the division, including U.S.-based Freightlin­er, the freedom to react quickly to changing markets and focus on the new technologi­es that are transformi­ng the automotive industry.

The voting at an online shareholde­r meeting Friday also means that Stuttgart-based Daimler will rename itself as Mercedes-Benz Group AG as of Feb. 1, 2022.

Daimler CEO Ola Kallenius said that “by unlocking the full potential of both companies, we are establishi­ng two undisputed innovation leaders who will set the pace in the transforma­tion of their industries.”

One reason for the spinoff is that the luxury cars and trucks are pursuing different technologi­cal approaches to developing zero local emission vehicles, with MercedesBe­nz focusing on battery-powered

cars while the truck business is developing hydrogen powered vehicles for long-haul transport. The move is intended to let the separate companies make faster, more independen­t decisions in a rapidly shifting environmen­t and serve distinct customer bases.

The company says luxury cars and big trucks are fundamenta­lly different businesses. The Mercedes-Benz car division sells a luxury product to wellheeled consumers, while the truck division sells big-ticket goods to businesses focused on the return on their investment. Splitting the two businesses will, Daimler hopes, reduce what it calls a conglomera­te discount – meaning the two companies would be worth more separately than they are together.

Daimler Truck is testing the GenH2 long-haul truck which uses liquid hydrogen to generate electric power from a fuel cell; the vehicle could be ready for use by 2027 if the hydrogen fuel infrastruc­ture is ready. Hydrogen trucks will be needed because increasing numbers of electric vehicles put more pressure on the electricit­y grid as tougher emission standards in Europe aimed at fighting climate change mandate larger numbers of electric cars. “Europe needs a hydrogen economy,” said Daimler Truck CEO Martin Daum.

Daimler Truck includes Freightlin­er trucks made in Cleveland, North Carolina; Mt. Holly, North Carolina; and Santiago Tianguiste­nco, Mexico, as well as its North American headquarte­rs and styling and test centers in Portland, Oregon.

The spinoff was approved by 99.9% of represente­d capital, and the renaming by 99.9%, with 56.4% of share capital represente­d at the meeting.

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