Audi plans electric car push

German automaker will invest a third of R&D budget into electric cars, digital services and autonomous driving

Audi chief executive Rupert Stadler has outlined a new roadmap aiming for electric cars to account for a quarter of the company's sales by 2025. Of the brand's 50 or so models, only two today are electric or semi-electric.
Audi chief executive Rupert Stadler has outlined a new roadmap aiming for electric cars to account for a quarter of the company's sales by 2025. Of the brand's 50 or so models, only two today are electric or semi-electric. PHOTO: REUTERS

BERLIN • Audi will aim for electric cars to account for a quarter of its sales by 2025 as part of a strategic overhaul following the emissions scandal at parent Volkswagen, company sources said, in a move that could step up the challenge to American group Tesla.

Audi, which has been slow to embrace battery-powered vehicles, will now invest about a third of its research and development budget into electric cars, digital services and autonomous driving, two company sources told Reuters.

Based on the 1.8 million cars sold by the German automaker last year, that would mean selling at least 450,000 electric cars a year. Factoring in an expected rise in sales, that could turn Audi into a major competitor to Tesla, which believes it can sell 500,000 electric cars by 2020 or sooner.

With the exception of BMW, Germany's luxury automakers have been late to develop electric vehicles, a market which is still making losses. But Audi's parent, Volkswagen, is under pressure to clean up its image in the wake of its emissions-test cheating scandal.

On Wednesday last week, Audi chief executive Rupert Stadler outlined details of the new business roadmap to more than 2,000 managers at a closed-door conference in Munich. German business daily Handelsblatt reported late on Monday about Audi's plans.

Figures compiled for Reuters by LMC Automotive show that German trio BMW, Mercedes-Benz and Audi - the world's largest producers of luxury cars - rank 12th, 14th and 22nd respectively when it comes to annual sales of electric and hybrid vehicles, trailing Toyota, Honda, Lexus and Nissan.

In the wake of Volkswagen's diesel test cheating, regulators around the world have intensified a clampdown on toxic fumes, potentially providing a boost in demand for zero-emission cars. Customers have, however, been slow to adopt electric cars which have a limited operating range and long recharging times. Of the 14 million new cars registered in the European Union and the European Free Trade Association last year, only about 186,000 were electric vehicles and about 234,000 were hybrids, figures from the European Automobile Manufacturers' Association show.

Year-to-date growth for electric vehicles has been slowing. While sales jumped by 55 per cent last year, they have risen just 15 per cent to 37,000 so far this year, said Jato Dynamics.

"Some governments in Northern Europe, where most of the electric vehicles are sold, have announced fewer incentives," said Mr Felipe Munoz, a global automotive analyst with Jato.

To free up funds for the new strategy, Audi plans cutbacks in its conventional combustion car programme, including steps to reduce country-specific variants of engines and transmissions, the sources said, without being more specific.

Volkswagen announced plans last month to spend billions of euros on electric cars, ride-hailing and automated driving to become a world leader in green transport by 2025.

Last year, Audi spent €4.24 billion (S$6.35 billion) on research and development. Of the brand's 50 or so models, only two are electric or semi-electric, and Audi is now taking orders on a third, the Q7 e-tron plug-in hybrid.

REUTERS

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A version of this article appeared in the print edition of The Straits Times on July 23, 2016, with the headline Audi plans electric car push. Subscribe