DESPITE THE global pandemic and a crippling shortage of silicon chips, German car makers brought a crazy-positive, get-er-done attitude to this week’s opening of the Munich auto show. I guess it’s fun to do the right thing, especially when you have no choice.
Relocated from business-friendly Frankfurt, scaled down and rebranded to emphasize sustainability and zero emissions, the IAA Mobility 2021 often felt less like a car show than a climate policy retreat and/or electric-bike Woodstock, with expo halls filled with devilishly clever e-assisted two-wheelers, cargo trikes, even “pedelecs,” as varied as birds. In the product-design margins between e-bikes and proper electric motorcycles are a slew of dangerously appealing minibikes aimed at young urbanites, such as BMW’s Concept CE 02.
“German makers expect sales in the U.S. to help offset the burdens of electrification in the home market.”
In the dizzy days of excess—five years ago?—the Frankfurt show was a carousel of fire-breathing, petrol-murdering sports cars, SUVs and GTs. In Munich this week, if a car had a tailpipe, it was relegated to the shadows. And yet, the cars in the spotlight—BMW’s new electric iX3 and iX, for instance, or VW’s city-car concept, ID. Life—made the New Normal look pretty good. What would you say to a 1,088-hp electric race-car that can compete for 30 minutes and recharge in 15, made by the guys who always win Le Mans? But first we must eat our vegetables.
In one socially distanced conference room after another, managing executives from VW Group, BMW and Daimler declared their companies’ love of electrification and promised to bring about the end of internal-combustion vehicles sooner, rather than their previous, deeply entrenched intention to do it later.
The enthusiasm for accelerated timelines might also be considered Optik. The German national elections are less than three weeks away. After the Dieselgate scandal of 2015, and after the climate-aggravated floods and fires of 2021, European voters and parliaments are thoroughly disenchanted with auto makers. The EU wants to ban new-car tailpipe emissions by 2035. In Germany, the Green Party is thinking more like 2030; and it also wants to enforce a 130-kMh speed limit on the Autobahn. Already, about half of the price of a liter of petrol in Germany, France and Britain is tax.
The point is, to a degree that I find astonishing and without precedent, the fate of the German Big Three is now a political matter, a weird sort of referendum in front of an aggrieved customer base. The car makers each could be regulated into receivership in their home market, and they bloody well know it.
For Americans, Europe can seem pretty far away, and Brussels might as well be Mars. Certainly when it comes to cars, it’s hard to imagine that a bunch of rules, or international climate-change agreements, signed over there could affect what we buy here. But they will, and the Munich show was a pretty good foretaste.
For one thing, electric models are taking their place at the top of luxury brands’ ladder of pecuniary envy. Mercedes-Benz and Mercedes-Maybach premiered five all-electric models in Munich, including an electric G-Class concept, the EQG; the production electric E-Class sedan (EQE); the compact crossover EQB; and the Mercedes-Maybach EQS SUV. So, right off, if you and your U.S.-based crew want the latest Maybach, the most statusy and exclusive thing the company makes, you will have to go electric. Moreover, you want to.
The flood of new e-models also suggests to me a long twilight for the rump portfolio—the current and the last generation of gas-powered E-Class, or B-Class, or G. From 2025, the company said, all newly launched vehicle architectures will be battery-electric. “After that, it’s just a matter of time,” said Daimler and Mercedes-Benz chairman Ola Källenius on Monday. Until then he awaits the end of internal combustion “impatiently.”
What that means: If in 10 years American buyers insist on any Mercedes-Benz with a tailpipe, they will pay more for a product whose technology is a decade old.
It’s clear that German car makers expect sales in the U.S. market—with its looser standards, cheaper gas and love of all things large—to help offset the burdens of electrification in the home market. BMW Group is targeting 50% reduction of global use-phase CO2 emissions by 2030. The notable word is “global,” giving management the flexibility, let’s call it, to sell larger, higher-polluting vehicles elsewhere on the planet—like the U.S.—and average their emissions with zero-emission counterparts in Europe.
VW Group’s catch phrase for the show is “Push Forward,” but their commitment to 70% of zero-emission vehicle sales by 2030 applies to Europe only. Likewise, Daimler’s Strategy Update published in July commits to “go all electric by the end of the decade, where market conditions allow.” That is one big North American weasel.
Just as the Munich show was veering toward sanctity, I was summoned to an off-site event by Porsche, where they revealed…Sorry…I’m verklempt. The Mission R is an all-electric cousin of one of the greatest sports-racing machines in history, the 911 Carrera Cup cars. The idea is that there will be a customer racing series with these fillies. Team owner, racer and actor Patrick Dempsey was Porsche CEO Oliver Blume’s arm candy for the event.
From the beltline up the Mission R hints at a future production model, Porsche Chief Designer Michael Mauer told me. Below that line is “pure racing,” including the drastic aerodynamic underbody—a sort of semi-open wheel design like the Aston Martin Valkyrie. With 680 hp bursting from front- and rear-mounted electric motors (Race Mode), rising to a maximum of 1,088 hp (Qualifying Mode), the Mission R has about the same dynamic envelope as a current 911 GT3 Cup car (0-60 mph in less than 2.5 seconds, top speed more than 186 mph)—maybe even a bit better, said Porsche’s director of GT Racecars Matthias Scholz, with a wink over his mask. Early days.
Unlike a Tesla’s skateboard-like underpinnings, the Missions R’s battery box is carried transversely, just ahead of the rear axle, to improve the polar moment of inertia, i.e. handling response. The ironing board-size rear wing has a hydraulically actuated flap—the Drag Reduction System (DRS), derived from F1 racing—whose high-speed efficiency helps the Mission R lap for 30 minutes of competitive racing.
The Mission R also features Porsche’s 900-volt electrical architecture and double-plug charging system, capable of pumping electrons into the car at a prodigious 340 kW. All you need then, I suppose, is a generator big enough to power a small hospital. Porsche says their racing clients would be able to recharge the car to 80% capacity in about 15 minutes—less time than it takes to change your overalls between stints.
See? The future ain’t so bad after all.
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