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						Bet everything on electric: Inside Volkswagen's radical 
						strategy shift
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		 [February 06, 2019]   
		By Edward Taylor and Jan Schwartz 
 WOLFSBURG, Germany (Reuters) - If 
		Volkswagen realizes its ambition of becoming the global leader in 
		electric cars, it will be thanks to a radical and risky bet born out of 
		the biggest calamity in its history.
 
 The German giant has staked its future, to the tune of 80 billion euros 
		($91 billion), on being able to profitably mass-produce electric 
		vehicles - a feat no carmaker has come close to achieving.
 
 So far mainstream automakers' electric plans have had one main goal: to 
		protect profits gleaned from high-margin conventional cars by adding 
		enough zero-emission vehicles to their fleet to meet clean-air rules.
 
 Customers have meanwhile largely shunned electric vehicles because they 
		are too expensive, can be inconvenient to charge and lack range.
 
 The biggest strategy shift in Volkswagen's 80 years has its roots in a 
		weekend crisis meeting at the Rothehof guesthouse in Wolfsburg on 
		October 10, 2015, senior executives told Reuters.
 
 At the meeting hosted by then VW brand chief Herbert Diess, nine top 
		managers gathered on a cloudy Saturday afternoon to discuss the way 
		forward after regulators blew the whistle on the company's emissions 
		cheating, a scandal that cost it more than 27 billion euros in fines and 
		tainted its name.
 
 "It was an intense discussion, so was the realization that this could be 
		an opportunity, if we jump far enough," said Juergen Stackmann, VW 
		brand's board member for sales.
 
		
		 
		
 "It was an initial planning session to do more than just play with the 
		idea of electric cars," he told Reuters. "We asked ourselves: what is 
		our vision for the future of the brand? Everything that you see today is 
		connected to this."
 
 Just three days after the Rothehof meeting of the VW brand's management 
		board, Volkswagen announced plans to develop an electric vehicle 
		platform, codenamed MEB, paving the way for mass production of an 
		affordable electric car.
 
 For months after the Volkswagen scandal blew up in 2015, rival carmakers 
		treated diesel-cheating as a "VW issue", according to industry experts. 
		But regulators have since uncovered excessive emissions across the 
		sector and unleashed a clampdown that undermines the business case for 
		combustion engines, forcing a sector-wide rethink.
 
 Now the "villain" of dieselgate is likely to become the largest producer 
		of electric cars in the world in coming years, analysts say, putting it 
		in pole position to flood the market - should the demand materialize.
 
 "Decisions to convert the Emden factory (in Lower Saxony) to build 
		electric cars, would never have happened without this Saturday meeting," 
		said Stackmann, one of five senior VW executives who spoke to Reuters.
 
 However the full scale of VW's ambitions were only revealed two months 
		ago when it took the industry by surprise by pledging to spend 80 
		billion euros to develop electric vehicles and buy batteries, dwarfing 
		the investment of rivals.
 
 It plans to raise annual production of electric cars to 3 million by 
		2025, from 40,000 in 2018.
 
 STRATEGIC PERILS
 
 It's a risky bet.
 
 With regulators and lawmakers, rather than customers, dictating what 
		kind of vehicles can hit the road, analysts at Deloitte say the industry 
		could produce 14 million electric cars for which there is no consumer 
		demand.
 
 It's also an all-or-nothing bet in the long run.
 
 VW, whose ID electric car will hit showrooms in 2020, has set a deadline 
		for ending mass production of combustion engines. The final generation 
		of gasoline and diesel engines will be developed by 2026.
 
		
		 
		
 Arndt Ellinghorst, analyst at Evercore ISI, said betting on electric 
		vehicles (EVs) could be risky because customers did not want to own cars 
		dependent on street-charging facilities.
 
 "What if people are still not ready to own EVs? Will adoption be the 
		same in the U.S., Europe and China?" he said.
 
 But he added that EU and Chinese emissions regulations made electric 
		vehicle adoption inevitable and that being an early industry mover in 
		that direction offered a "positive risk-reward".
 
 Another by-product of dieselgate that quickened VW's electric drive, 
		according to the senior executives, was a purge of the company's old 
		guard, who became the focus of public and political anger.
 
 This empowered Diess, a newcomer who had joined as VW brand boss shortly 
		before U.S. regulators exposed the carmaker's emission test cheating.
 
 Diess, who joined from BMW where he helped pioneer a ground-breaking 
		electric vehicle, has since been appointed CEO of Volkswagen Group, a 
		multi-brand empire that includes Audi, Porsche, Bentley, Seat, Skoda, 
		Lamborghini and Ducati.
 
 Carmakers have failed to mass-produce electric cars profitably largely 
		because of the prohibitive cost of battery packs which make up between 
		30 percent and 50 percent of the cost of an electric vehicle.
 
 A 500 km-range battery costs around $20,000, compared with a gasoline 
		engine that costs around $5,000. Add to that another $2,000 for the 
		electric motor and inverter, and the gap is even wider.
 
		
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			Dr. Herbert Diess, CEO, Volkswagen AG, speaks at the company's 
			presentation at the North American International Auto Show in 
			Detroit, Michigan, U.S., January 14, 2019. REUTERS/Jonathan 
			Ernst/File Photo 
            
			 
Even electric start-up Tesla's cheapest car, the Model 3, is on sale in Germany 
at 55,400 euros, priced just below a base model Porsche Macan, a compact SUV. In 
the United States, Model 3 prices start at $35,950.
 VW believes its scale will give it an edge to build an electric vehicle costing 
no more than its current Golf model, about 20,000 euros, using its procurement 
clout as the world's largest car and truck maker to drive down the cost.
 
 "We are Volkswagen, a brand for the people. For electric cars we need economies 
of scale. And VW, more than any other carmaker, can take advantage of this," a 
senior Volkswagen executive told Reuters, declining to be named.
 
The carmaker's electric-vehicle budget outstrips that of its closest competitor, 
Germany's Daimler, which has committed $42 billion. General Motors, the No.1 
U.S. automaker, has said it plans to spend a combined $8 billion on electric and 
self-driving vehicles.
 Renault-Nissan-Mitsubishi said in late 2017 they would spend 10 billion euros by 
2022 on developing electric and autonomous cars.
 
 "On a 2025 view, we expect Volkswagen to be the number one electric vehicles 
producer globally," UBS analyst Patrick Hummel said. "Tesla is likely to remain 
a niche player."
 
 STRICTER TESTING
 
 VW's test cheating using engine management software - "defeat devices" - 
resulted in the introduction of tougher pollution tests which revealed in 2016 
and 2017 that emissions readings across the industry were up to 20 percent 
higher under real-world driving conditions compared with lab conditions.
 
 This has raised the bar on the auto sector's efforts to cut emissions of carbon 
dioxide, blamed for causing global warming.
 
 EU lawmakers in December agreed a cut in carbon dioxide emissions from cars of 
37.5 percent by 2030 compared with 2021 levels. This was after the European 
Union forced a 40 percent cut in emissions between 2007 and 2021.
 
 
 "This goal is no longer reachable using combustion engines alone," Volkmar 
Denner, chief executive of Bosch, the world's biggest auto supplier, said about 
the 2030 proposals.
 
 Every gram of excessive carbon dioxide pollution will be penalized with a 95 
euros fine from this year onwards.
 
 Strategy firm PA Consulting forecasts VW will face a 1.4-billion-euro penalty 
for overstepping average limits in Europe by 2021, while Ford and Fiat-Chrysler 
face fines of 430 million euros and 700 million euros respectively.
 
 Daimler, BMW, PSA, Mazda and Hyundai will miss their 2021 average emissions 
targets, PA Consulting forecasts. Toyota, Renault-Nissan-Mitsubishi, Volvo, 
Honda and Jaguar Land Rover are on track to meet their goals.
 
 PA Consulting's forecasts were extrapolated using 2017 registration data for 
each powertrain type and consumer buying trends, but do not include more recent 
sales trends.
 
 Ford, VW and BMW said they would meet their targets because of a push to sell 
more hybrid and electric cars in 2018. Daimler said it aimed to meet the 
targets, PSA said it would respect the targets while Fiat-Chrysler declined to 
comment. Mazda had no immediate comment, while Hyundai did not respond to a 
request for comment.
 
 Carmakers have struggled to lower their average fleet emissions because of a 
shift in customer taste toward heavier, bigger SUVs (sports utility vehicles), 
which make it harder to maintain the same levels of acceleration and comfort 
without increasing fuel consumption and pollution.
 
 SUVs are now the most popular vehicle category in Europe, commanding a market 
share of 34.6 percent, according to JATO Dynamics. Even Porsche, which makes 
lightweight sportscars, relies on sports utility vehicles for 61 percent of 
sales.
 
 As the industry-wide scale of excessive emissions prompted Brussels to push 
through tougher laws late last year, VW executives concluded that purely 
electric cars were the most efficient way to meet carbon dioxide goals across 
its fleet.
 
 This was the point of no return, according to executives, when the company made 
the final electric investment decisions and committed to staying the course it 
had plotted after dieselgate.
 
 
 "After evaluating alternatives, we opted for electromobility," chief operating 
officer Ralf Brandstaetter told Reuters about VW's deliberations in November.
 
 (Additional reporting by Ilona Wissenbach and Agnieszka Flak; Editing by Pravin 
Char)
 
				 
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