Daimler Financial Services establishes new division on its Board of Management: “Digital and Mobility Solutions”

FARMINGTON HILLS, Mich., May 13, 2019 /PRNewswire/ — Jörg Lamparter, Head of Mobility Services, to become Daimler Financial Services AG Board Member, leading newly created Digital and Mobility Solutions division, effective June 1, 2019 Benedikt Schell, currently Chief Experience Officer (CXO) on the Board of Management for Daimler Financial Services AG, moving to the position… Continue reading Daimler Financial Services establishes new division on its Board of Management: “Digital and Mobility Solutions”

“OUR BRANDS. OUR STORIES.”: BMW Group Classic expands the range of information provided with an innovative newsletter.

Munich. BMW Group Classic is expanding its communication activities with an innovative newsletter packed with the latest information from the history of the vehicles and the brand. Under the title of “OUR BRANDS. OUR STORIES.”, journalists and friends of BMW Group Classic can start to find out right now about news and interesting information from… Continue reading “OUR BRANDS. OUR STORIES.”: BMW Group Classic expands the range of information provided with an innovative newsletter.

Car manufacturer: Volkswagen wants to conquer the market for e-mobility

VW electric car ID.3 The Tesla competitor of Volkswagen will be delivered from summer 2020. (Photo: AP) DusseldorfVolkswagen is the largest automaker in the world, nearly eleven million vehicles ran off the belts last year. In view of such quantities worthwhile technical developments in Wolfsburg, which have to think twice smaller automakers twice. This is… Continue reading Car manufacturer: Volkswagen wants to conquer the market for e-mobility

VW’s $2 billion penalty for diesel scam, Electrify America, builds electric chargers across US

Source: Electrify America
Electrify America charging station

Almost a year to the day after opening its first charging station, Electrify America says it is rolling out the country's fastest-growing network of fast chargers.

Funded by $2 billion from Volkswagen's 2016 diesel emissions settlement, it has a goal of building hundreds of stations and putting nearly 2,000 chargers in place by the end of this year.

Many of those will let battery-electric vehicle, or BEV, owners charge up nearly as quickly as they could fill a gas tank. Charging speed — along with the lack of a national network of charging stations — has been cited as a key obstacle to the widespread public adoption of electric cars.

“Longer range and faster charging times are critical to the widespread adoption of electric vehicles,” said Brendan Jones, the chief operating officer at Electrify America, during a conversation at the company's headquarters in Reston, Virginia. It's the equivalent of the classic chicken-and-egg problem.

EVs go mainstream

Extended-range vehicles, offering anywhere from 200 to nearly 400 miles per charge, are starting to roll out in large numbers from mainstream brands such as Daimler, Ford, General Motors and Volkswagen, as well as start-ups such as Tesla and Rivian.

Setting up a nationwide infrastructure is the next big challenge, according to many analysts. An August study by McKinsey & Co. projected it will cost as much as $50 billion to ensure public charging stations are as easily accessible as gas stations in three key markets — the U.S., Europe and China. The U.S. alone is expected to require an investment of as much as $11 billion, McKinsey estimated.

Several key players have entered the field and are starting to ramp up efforts to fill the broad gaps that exist across the country. These include Tesla, which has already put into operation 1,441 Supercharger stations across North America, the vast majority of them along U.S. roadways. Those facilities are only available to Tesla owners, but companies such as EVgo and ChargePoint are targeting the rest of the market. So is Electrify America.

Emissions settlement

Electrify America must spend that $2 billion by the end of 2026. The company, based in the suburbs of Washington, D.C., was created as part of Volkswagen's diesel emissions settlement with U.S. and California regulators.

The company is spending that money on a mix of consumer education and infrastructure, the latter drawing the vast majority of the funding. Though Electrify America is housed in the same faceless office complex as Volkswagen's U.S. headquarters, the settlement calls for it to operate as an independent entity. That was underscored by a network television ad the organization ran last year that featured a number of different electric vehicles, including those from Nissan, BMW and General Motors, but none from VW.

Electrify America's charging stations are being outfitted to allow any plug-based vehicle to connect, though Tesla owners will need an optional, proprietary adapter.

The first of its charging stations opened for business about a year ago. Since then, more than 160 have come online, with dozens more in various stages of completion. Each station features an average of four to five chargers, with a maximum of 10 at what are expected to become high-volume locations.

Building out

The goal is to have about 2,800 Level 2 and more than 2,000 Level 3 chargers in operation around the U.S. by the end of this year, said Electrify America CEO Giovanni Palazzo. To put that into perspective, the U.S. Department of Energy said a total of 54,638 public Level 2 and 3 chargers were in operation across the country at the end of 2018.

Electrify America's initial focus is on regions with high levels of EV ownership such as California and parts of the East Coast, he said. But it eventually plans to have charging stations that are no more than 70 miles apart along all major roadways in most states. Urban areas where EV ownership is expected to peak will have more of them.

The Level 2 systems, much like those that electric-car owners can install at home or find at many shopping centers and offices, provide 240-volt current at a rate that normally requires anywhere from four to 10 hours for a long-range vehicle to fully recharge. In many instances, Electrify America is targeting locations where owners who live in multifamily dwellings may not have on-site access to a charger.

The real transformation, industry observers believe, is the emergence of a Level 3 network. Around mid-decade, only a handful were open to the public in the entire country, but they are believed to now number in the 100s of stations and expanding rapidly, according to Palazzo and other experts.

Level 3

The first of these punched out 50 kilowatts of direct current, something that allowed for much more rapid charging — a Chevrolet Bolt EV, for example, can replenish about 80% of its charge in an hour or so.

Moving forward, Electrify America's new Level 3 systems will almost all provide a minimum of 150 kilowatts at 400 volts and many will push even further, taking that up to 250 kW and 800 volts. That's far more than most of the current crop of electric cars can handle. The new Porsche Taycan will be the first to be able to make full use of the technology, which can add about 20 miles of range per minute.

Source: Porsche
2019 Porsche Taycan

“That will let it recharge in about 10 minutes,” said Jones, “about the same amount of time as it takes to fill up a gas tank.”

To make things easier and speed up the charging process, Electrify America this week is rolling out a new smartphone app that can be used to locate its charging stations and see how long it will take for someone already hooked up to finish charging.

At the company's technical center, a short drive from its Reston headquarters, chief engineer Seth Cutler demonstrated to reporters last week what he hopes will further improve the customer experience and shave another minute or two off the charging process.

Tricky pricing

Normally, a user has to plug their vehicle in and go through a set-up process similar to paying for a tank of gas. But this time, as Cutler plugs a car into a charger prototype, everything is handled automatically. New software allows the charger to query the vehicle's on-board controller to find out how much power it can handle and how to bill it.

Pricing is still a bit of a challenge for EV owners. At home, based on typical U.S. energy rates of around 11 cents a kW, a vehicle like the Chevy Bolt, with a 65 kilowatt-hour pack, will cost less than $10 to “fill up.” And many owners are eligible for time-of-day rates that drop substantially when charging overnight.

That's why industry data show that about 80% of EV owners currently charge either at home or at an office during the day, noted Electrify America's Jones.

But the forecast is that more and more buyers won't have ready access to those Level 2 systems, while others will tap out their batteries while traveling longer distances, requiring them to plug into a commercially operated charging station.

Pricing can vary from company to company and even from one state to another. Charging companies typically offer discounted subscription services, but they also penalize nonsubscribers with “hook-up” fees of as much as $5.

More than gas

More often than not, motorists are billed on a per-minute basis, and that can add up if a vehicle is slow to charge, as I found out plugging in a Hyundai Kona EV to an EVgo charger in Ferndale, Michigan, earlier this year. After about 50 minutes, the battery crossover had gained only 80 extra miles of range on the 50 kW Level 3 system. The bill? Around $16, or 20 cents a mile. At the time, Michigan gas cost around $2.30 a gallon. A gasoline-fueled Kona, with mileage of 23 city and 28 highway, would have averaged less than 10 cents a mile.

While faster Level 3 chargers operated by Electrify America and other companies levy a higher fee when pumping out more current, the premium is modest, so it still works out to a lower final price. And that's before factoring in the convenience of not having to wait around for an hour or so.

Electrify America is now dropping its prices by 20%, which should make running an electric car while having to use public charging stations more cost-competitive with a gasoline vehicle, said Jones.

Yet another step some charging companies are taking will let their systems talk to one another and, in the process, accept competitors' subscribers without charging exorbitant hook-up fees.

Such steps will be critical to gaining acceptance for battery-electric vehicles, said Palazzo and Pasquale Romano, the CEO of ChargePoint.

In the red

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BMW Startup Garage secures early access to pioneering innovations.

Munich. The BMW Startup Garage – part of the company’s Research, New Technologies and Innovations unit – has been tracking down the most innovative startups in the business for four years now, allowing the BMW Group to tap into their potential quickly and directly. So far, more than 50 up-and-coming technology companies have completed its… Continue reading BMW Startup Garage secures early access to pioneering innovations.

UPDATE 2-Continental powertrain IPO could be delayed further after profit slides

* First-quarter net profit falls 22 pct to 575 mln euros * Expects market upturn in second half * Affirms guidance for operating margin of 8-9 pct * CFO says powertrain IPO depends on market conditions (Recasts, adds CFO quotes on powertrain IPO) HAMBURG/BERLIN, May 9 (Reuters) – German automotive supplier Continental’s spin-off of its… Continue reading UPDATE 2-Continental powertrain IPO could be delayed further after profit slides

Mercedes-Benz EQC, VW ID 3, FCA emissions boost Tesla: Today’s Car News

Tesla Model Y – introduction, Hawthorne CA, March 2019
Electric cars are starting to roll out from German automakers. Volkswagen gave a name to its new electric hatchback, and started taking orders. And Mercedes-Benz rolled the first electric EQC SUV off its assembly line in Germany. Details emerged of Fiat Chrysler's deal with Tesla to share emissions credits. All this and more on Green Car Reports.

Volkswagen opened its order banks for its first of a new generation of electric cars, the ID 3 electric hatchback, albeit only in Europe.

Mercedes-Benz also launched its new EQC electric SUV in Europe, with the first example rolling off the assembly line this week.

The emissions deal between Tesla and FCA announced last month could be worth a surprising amount to Tesla's bottom line.

And in our latest Twitter poll, most readers reported realizing the full amount of the federal tax credit if they bought an electric car last year. A sizable minority, however, didn't.

Google is revamping its Android Auto driving interface to give it a cleaner look, more flexibility, and simpler operation.

Finally, BMW says it will roll out a fleet of 500 fully-self-driving SUVs based on its iNext electric SUV concept, in 2021.

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Daimler Financial Services: Future topic “Mobility”

08.

May 2019

Stuttgart

Jörg Lamparter, Head of Mobility Services, to become Daimler Financial Services AG Board Member for “Digital and Mobility Solutions”, effective June 1, 2019 Benedikt Schell, currently Chief Experience Officer (CXO) on the Board of Management for Daimler Financial Services AG, moving to the position of Chairman of Mercedes-Benz Bank AG in Germany Klaus Entenmann, Chairman of Daimler Financial Services AG: “In Jörg Lamparter, we are gaining a recognized expert in digital mobility services as a new Member of the Board of Management. Within Daimler Financial Services AG, which will change its name to Daimler Mobility AG this summer, he will systematically merge the growing fields of digitization and mobility.” Stuttgart, Germany – Daimler Financial Services AG is strategically realigning key areas of its business by establishing a new division on the Board of Management. Effective June1, 2019, Jörg Lamparter is poised to become a new Member of the Daimler Fina..

Designers at Ford are using virtual reality tools to work with colleagues remotely

FordEmployees at Ford have started to use a 3D virtual reality (VR) tool that enables them to work on designs with colleagues remotely in real time.
The technology has been developed by Gravity Sketch, in collaboration with Ford. It sees workers wear headsets and use controllers to “draw, rotate, expand and compress a 3D sketch.”
A feature in the system, called Co-Creation, allows designers around the world to work on and evaluate designs in real time while being in different offices. The Gravity Sketch platform negates the need for an initial 2D design process, allowing designers to work with a 3D model from the start.
In a statement earlier this week Michael Smith, design manager at Ford, said that the Co-Creation feature added “more voices to the conversation in a virtual environment, which results in more efficient design work that may help accelerate a vehicle program's development.”
Ford said that designers in five Ford studios around the world were experimenting with Gravity Sketch, looking at both “workflow feasibility” and capabilities relating to “real-time co-creation and collaboration.”
As technology develops, VR is starting to be used across a wide range of industries. In April 2019, for example, it was announced that Qatar Airways had partnered with Rolls-Royce to trial a VR training tool.
The technology, which uses HTC Vive equipment, has been designed to give engineers virtual refresher training with Rolls-Royce's biggest engine, the Trent XWB.
A few months earlier, in February, the British Army awarded a £1 million ($1.3 million) contract to a software developer to “explore how virtual reality can be integrated into soldier training.”
The Ministry of Defence said the pilot scheme would look to test a range of virtual reality applications. These include high resolution virtual reality headsets; avatars that can be customized to replicate facial features and body shapes; and technology that offers data capture and analysis to help soldiers “better understand their own performance.”

Hyundai Mobis Accelerates ‘Open Innovation’ in Cooperation With MIT

SEOUL, South Korea–(BUSINESS WIRE)–Hyundai Mobis (KRX:012330) embarks on the road to open innovation in the field of new technology for future cars by cooperating with the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), USA. The MIT Industrial Liaison Program (ILP) joined by Hyundai Mobis boasts world-class caliber for its portfolios of core technologies with an annual patent-derived… Continue reading Hyundai Mobis Accelerates ‘Open Innovation’ in Cooperation With MIT