EU rules will see margins
for traditional vehicles fall
short, says VW executive
European emissions rules due to come
into force as soon as 2025 are likely to
make petrol cars less profitable than
electric models, signifying a landmark
moment for the automobile industry,
according to one of Volkswagen’s most
senior executives.
VW, the world’s second-largest automaker, has set out plans to invest €35bn
in electric vehicles as governments try
to accelerate the transition to less polluting cars. Thomas Ulbrich, head of development at the VW brand, said new engine
standards, called Euro 7, would pose a
“tremendous challenge” for petrolbased vehicles because they would need
more expensive technology to ensure
they are compliant.
“If you now ask when is the point for
[profits] becoming equal to an internal
combustion engine, you know that with
Euro 7 there are tremendous challenges
for the internal combustion engine
world,” Ulbrich said.
The regulations, which are due to
come into effect in about 2025, would
require more “technical needs” such as
expensive emissions reduction equipment in internal combustion engine
cars, he added.
The forecast from Ulbrich is one of the starkest yet from an industry that, with
some exceptions, still makes far more
money selling traditional petrol engines
than electric ones.
Peugeot owner Stellantis said last
week that while margins on its electric
cars were similar to those for petrol
models, government subsidies for the
former were likely to be unwound in the
coming years. Renault said its electric
cars had equal margins to some of its
current petrol range. Global carmakers are investing billions of dollars as they race to prepare
for the demise of the ICE, as the internal
combustion engine is known in the
industry.
Smaller cars — such as the VW Polo
and Up! models — will be hardest hit
because passing on the direct costs of
new emissions systems will push the
price up significantly, he said.
Germany’s car industry lobby, the
VDA, has already voiced its concern
over the Euro 7 engines rules, claiming
they are five to 10 times harsher than
the current standards.
“The proposals continue to move at
the limits of what is technologically
achievable,” Hildegard Müller, the head
of the VDA, said in April. “We must continue to be very vigilant that the internal combustion engine is not rendered
impossible by Euro 7.”
A month later, the association warned
that EU emissions regulations could
lead to the loss of 215,000 jobs across the
industry. VW expects that a third of its
European sales will be electric by 2025,
rising to 70 per cent by the end of the
decade.
Its targets are less ambitious, however, than Ford or Vauxhall-Opel, which
plan to end any petrol or hybrid car
sales in the region by 2030 and 2028
respectively.
The European Commission will this
week lay out expected CO2 regulations
for 2030, which will tighten existing
requirements and force carmakers to
significantly increase production of
electric vehicles.