Mercedes-Benz is accelerating its roll-out of battery-powered autos in a race to meet tighter emissions rules as European buyers turn away from fuel-efficient diesel cars.
In a $10.8 billion project, the world’s largest luxury-car maker intends to release 10 new electric vehicles by 2022. The expedited time frame reflects the urgency facing manufacturers as they brace for a shift away from traditional automotive technologies. Combustion engines would continue to be refined for a “transitional period,” Mercedes parent Daimler AG said on Wednesday.
Further fundamental changes will be required for Daimler to remain successful, as the industry adjusts to cars running on electric motors and capable of driving themselves.
The faster pace comes as the industry battles with a backlash against diesel cars stemming from Volkswagen AG’s cheating scandal. Daimler has also been embroiled, with German prosecutors investigating the Stuttgart-based automaker’s employees over diesel-manipulation allegations. The technology is key for meeting increasingly stringent rules for lower carbon-dioxide emissions.
Daimler is cooperating with authorities on the diesel probe, Chief Executive Officer Dieter Zetsche said on Wednesday, in his first public comments on the matter since the investigation became public on March 22. He repeated that Germany’s motor authority and transport ministry had found no violations in their tests of Daimler vehicles.
After achieving steady reductions in CO2 emissions in previous years, Daimler struggled in 2016 with levels in Europe steady at 123 grams per kilometer as buyers favored larger vehicles. In its home region, Daimler needs to reach 100 grams per kilometer by 2021 or face fines.
German diesel demand in December fell to the lowest level since September 2010, accounting for 43 percent of total sales, according to the Center for Automotive Research at the University of Duisburg-Essen. Early signs of car-makers shifting focus from combustion engines are showing, Germany’s IG Metall union said after conducting a survey of manufacturers and suppliers in Daimler’s home state of Baden-Wuerttemberg.
Among development teams, especially in diesel, there are signs there’s less to do as electrification is starting to have an impact.
Like other automakers trying to prepare for a future of electric self-driving cars, Daimler’s been focusing its investments on future technologies at the expense of short-term profits. The company plans to spend more than 1 billion euros on its global battery production facilities, about half of which will go to a subsidiary in Kamenz, Germany.
To bridge the gap toward an era of fully electric vehicles, Daimler is also continuing to develop plug-in hybrids. Mercedes already has eight such models for sale, with upcoming versions set to include a new hybrid S-Class sedan with an extended battery range of as much as 50 kilometers (31 miles).
“It is necessary to do one thing without stopping with the other,” said Zetsche. “That’s why we are strengthening both: the new and the old.”