Maserati is considering adding plug-in hybrid powertrains to its line-up as it bridges the gap between ICE and EV power - and a next-gen Quattroporte hybrid is tipped to be among the new electrified models.
Currently the firm has three powertrain types spread across its three model lines: pure-V6, mild-hybrid turbo four-cylinder, and pure-electric. But CEO Santo Ficili told Autocar the company needs to offer its customers “all the possibilities” of propulsion as it gears up to go electric.
"What’s sure is that we need to talk with our customers, because they are a bit confused at this time,” he said. “You can imagine: PHEV, BEV, mild hybrid… We need to stay in touch with our customers.”
Ficili added: “I don’t know when we will go totally BEV. For sure in the future, but I don’t know when automotive will go in this direction. It’s a question of timing. In the middle, we need to consider MHEV and PHEV engines, depending on the development of the technology we want to follow.”
Maserati’s current cars are based on platforms that would not readily accommodate plug-in hybrid powertrains, but sibling brand Alfa Romeo is poised to launch a new Stelvio SUV (below) and Giulia saloon on Stellantis’s new STLA Large platform, which can accommodate ICE, EV and hybrid drivetrains.
Ficili suggested that Maserati would also use the flexible STLA structure for future models and said a push for “synergies” between the two Italian manufacturers could mean their cars become more closely related. That opens the door for the next Giulia and Stelvio to provide the basis for a new Quattroporte and Levante respectively, with the choice of EV and hybrid power.
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Having seen the engineering of their ICE vehicles, I think going EV will be good for them.
The Levante needs to become a true full-size vehicle in its next generation, in the mode of the X7 and GLS! Today it appears both larger and bulkier than the Cayenne, yet is said to be smaller and tighter inside. Making it a true full-size vehicle, to complement the Quattroporte, this would keep the Stelvio, which is moving up to midsize, from competing in the same class with its fellow Italian.