The Volkswagen Group is “quite confident” that it can deliver €25,000 (£22,000) electric cars from the Skoda and Volkswagen brands, chief financial officer Arno Antlitz has said.
Volkswagen revealed the ID 2all concept in March, previewing a Polo-size EV that targets an entry price of around £22,000. This is significantly cheaper than any mainstream EV currently on the market, the UK’s cheapest EV (excluding the Citroën Ami quadricycle) being the £26,995 MG 4 EV.
Volkswagen also announced that it’s working “full steam ahead” on a sub-€20,000 (£17,000) entry-level electric model, expected to be named the ID 1.
Skoda is set to copy each model in crossover form, targeting the same price points.
Asked at the Financial Times Future of the Car summit whether these prices were still possible and whether the cars could be built profitably, Antlitz said: “For the time being, we’re quite confident that we can achieve that price point.
“There’s a lot of innovations coming in the technical side. This car will have the first in-house battery cells from our Valencia plant. We’re just ramping up; we will have much more scale by then.
“[We have also seen a slight] improvement or relief on the raw material cost. Look at lithium: it came down. Nickel came down. So from this perspective, we’re quite confident that we can achieve that €25,000 target and at the same time have a decent margin.”
Antlitz hinted that the Volkswagen Group’s ownership of battery designs and manufacturing would be critical, saying that it would be a “decisive factor” in terms of battery availability and cost.
Volkswagen brand boss Thomas Schäfer previously told Autocar that the economies of scale planned – with the new MEB Entry platform spawning more affordable EVs from Cupra as well as Volkswagen and Skoda – would further help to cut costs.