Business & people
Coronavirus will boost electrification shift, VW and Bentley execs say
Coronavirus will boost electrification shift, VW and Bentley execs say
Andrew Roberts, Unsplash
"Certainly you're going to see a faster transformation to electric mobility," Christian Dahlheim, VW Group's head of sales, told an online summit hosted by the United Kingdom auto association, the SMMT.
The move will be driven partly by the public's desire to see the continuation of cleaner air experienced during the lockdown as life returns to normality, Dahlheim said.
Bentley has said it will launch a full-electric car by 2026 and offer a hybrid version of all its models by 2023. However, Hallmark told Automotive News Europe in an interview earlier this month that the immediate effect of the coronavirus was to temporarily freeze the company's investments in future projects such as the electric car.
"The short-term shock doesn't help because we did plan to generate more cash to be able to preinvest in the next generation (models)," he said. "But it didn't change the strategic direction."
Sales of plug-in hybrid cars in Europe were already on the rise in 2020 as auto makers introduced more versions to help meet tougher CO2 reduction targets imposed by the EU.
Sales of full-electric vehicles and plug-in hybrids doubled to 167,132 cars in the first three months compared to the same period last year, according to industry association ACEA.
Recent government incentive packages in France and Germany to boost demand for autos are heavily weighted toward promoting sales of plug-in hybrids.
Dahlheim said sales of full-electric cars will be dampened by the slow rollout of charging facilities.
"Half of our consumers are willing to drive electric, but the biggest hurdle is infrastructure," he said.
The VW Group plans to invest nearly $34 billion across its 12 brands by 2024 in a push to become the world's largest electric car maker. VW brand alone has said it will invest more than $12 billion as it aims to produce 1.5 million electric cars a year in 2025.