Volkswagen will build between two and three million pure-electric cars by 2025, which is around one in every four cars leaving its factories, according to Volkswagen Group boss Matthias Müller.
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Speaking at the launch of VW’s ‘Strategy 2025’ in Wolfsburg this morning, Müller also revealed that the wider VW Group would make a “big reduction” in the number of model variants it produces - currently around 340 - as well as slashing the number of individual modular architectures from 12 to just four.
As Autocar predicted at the start of the year, this platform cull could cause future large Audis based on Porsche’s MSB platform and Audi’s unusual, longitudinally engined, MLB architecture to be dropped altogether. VW’s stand-alone NSF platform - which underpins the Up - could also be killed off.
In future, there will be just four platforms: small, medium, premium and sports car.
Müller said the VW Group will launch its first "fully autonomous" vehicle, which will be developed in-house, in 2021.
As part of the big bet on electric vehicles, which could mean as many as 30 individual models being made, VW said it is now studying how making batteries might become a ‘competency’ at the group. Müller suggested that, if VW’s electrification plans come to fruition, it would need around 150 gigawatt hours of battery capacity each year.
VW said it will also definitely build a budget car "with local partners', although Müller hinted the new model would be aimed specifically at Asia. VW will also combine its huge components division - which employs 60,000 people – into a single entity that will be run independently and be able to sell products to third parties.
VW commercial vehicle brands - including Scania and MAN - will become part of an integrated bus and truck division, which will seek "greater efficiencies", Müller said. Many analysts have speculated that VW could dispose of the truck brand should the final bill from the Dieselgate scandal prove to be significantly higher than the current provision of €20 billion or so.
Müller said VW also wanted to be at the cutting edge of what it believed would be the major shifts in the automotive industry over the next decade. Although the mainstream global car business will experience big growth in SUVs, crossovers and budget cars, the future lies in more electrification, autonomous ability and connectivity to the 'cloud'.
Under the heading of ‘Mobility Solutions’ , VW said its “top priority” will be “ride hailing” through its partnership with Gett, which claims to have 50 million customers already. It wants to see "multi-billion' sales revenue from this by 2025.
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Pie meet sky
Bold claim
It'll need to be ALOT more...
combustioned engined cars by then...