The Porsche Newsroom is a service provided by the Porsche Communication for journalists, bloggers and the online community. The official website of Porsche AG can be reached at www.porsche.com © 2019 Dr. Ing. h.c. F. Porsche AG.*The data presented here was recorded using the Euro 5 test procedure (715/2007/EC, 692/2008/EC, 566/2011/EC and ECE-R 101) and the NEDC (New… Continue reading Manfred Bräunl appointed as new CEO of Porsche in Middle East
Tag: VW
InMotion backs Urgent.ly alongside a number of premium automotive brands
We are incredibly excited to announce our latest investment in Urgent.ly, the connected roadside assistance service. As part of a $21 million Series B round, we are co-investing alongside a number of other premium global automotive brands. Supported by a cutting edge technology platform, Urgent.ly’s new model for roadside assistance has the ability to connect… Continue reading InMotion backs Urgent.ly alongside a number of premium automotive brands
Volkswagen’s sub-£18,000 electric car confirmed by bosses
Volkswagen's sub-£18,000 electric car confirmed by bosses
Volkswagen USA CEO Talks Dieselgate, Tesla, & China
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Cars Published on February 2nd, 2019 | by Guest Contributor
Volkswagen USA CEO Talks Dieselgate, Tesla, & ChinaTwitterLinkedInFacebookFebruary 2nd, 2019 by Guest Contributor
Originally published on X Auto.
By Ian Pavelko
Volkswagen has a history of sending mixed messages when it comes to EV strategy, competition from Tesla, and the company’s murky ties to diesel. Motor Trend recently sat down with Volkswagen of America CEO Scott Keogh to get his feedback on a number of issues facing the automaker.
Keogh calls Dieselgate “the ultimate betrayal.” He admits, “we made VW un-matter to people. When companies get into crisis mode, they climb into a bunker, and they lose their mojo.” In response, Keogh says VW recently changed its advertising agency.
Moving forward, Keogh says, “We’re going to operate as a company that matters and is ethical, and we’re moving into EVs, and hopefully we’ll get that redemption. Our German uniqueness and quirkiness, depending on its application, is 100 percent good and necessary because it’s a distinguishing factor.”
When asked, specifically, about VW’s electrification strategy, Keogh remarks, “We are arriving with a proper VW at a VW price, at a time when market sentiment and reaction and consumer sentiment is building.” Nevertheless, as head of North America for Volkswagen, Keogh sees the real opportunity for electric cars in China.
“There is no debate China will be the explosive EV market. And they need a lot of EVs due to congestion, smog, and autonomy. They missed 20th-century auto. They want to win ‘new auto’—EV, autonomous, connected,” says Keogh. He adds that China’s EV policies help, “Sometimes policy needs to give innovation a leg up. … When you have policies, and particularly (China’s) policies, it can stimulate consumers to follow those policies.”
What about Tesla? Keogh says, “Right now market share is 50 percent Tesla and 50 percent everyone else. Who is going to win the other 50 percent? That breakthrough product has not arrived yet.”
Note:For more information on Navigational Rallying in Quebec, check out Club Autosport La Licorne’s Facebook page (in French).
About the AuthorGuest Contributor is many, many people. We publish a number of guest posts from experts in a large variety of fields. This is our contributor account for those special people. 😀
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Ioannis Sakkaros: A Porsche employee is the head of the yellow vests in Stuttgart
Ioannis Sakkaros DusseldorfA few weeks ago Ioannis Sakkaros was still a simple shift worker at the sports car manufacturer Porsche, Meanwhile, the 26-year-old is known to a wide audience. Last week, he was even invited to the Maybrit Illner TV show – alongside Transport Minister Andreas Scheuer, the top car lover Bernhard Mattes and Green… Continue reading Ioannis Sakkaros: A Porsche employee is the head of the yellow vests in Stuttgart
VW revives the dune buggy with an electric concept vehicle that brings the past into the future
Volkswagen Design
Volkswagen's electric dune buggy concept vehicle
Cue the Beach Boys. Along with their California-tinged sound, one of the staples of the '60s surf scene was the dune buggy, typically a modified version of the equally iconic Volkswagen Beetle, and now the automaker is ready to show off an all-new, retro-futuristic dune crawler.
But this time, the VW dune buggy concept vehicle set to debut at the Geneva Motor Show in March will be environmentally friendly, riding on the same electrified platform that will be shared with dozens of battery-electric vehicles, or BEVs, the German company plans to bring to market by 2025.
“A buggy is more than a car. It is vibrancy and energy on four wheels,” VW's global design chief Klaus Bischoff said in a statement accompanying a pair of shots teasing the dune buggy concept's debut. “These attributes are embodied by the new e-buggy, which demonstrates how a modern, non-retro interpretation of a classic can look and, more than anything else, the emotional bond that electric mobility can create.”
Beach buggies
Also known as beach buggies and sand rails, they became wildly popular with the launch of the Meyers Manx, produced by California surfer and entrepreneur Bruce Meyers. Debuting in 1964, Meyers came up with the idea of lifting the body off the original Volkswagen Beetle and replacing it with a fiberglass, open-topped shell, making a few other modifications that would let it operate on sand dunes, as well as public roads.
Volkswagen estimates that as many as 250,000 of the original Beetles were modified into dune buggies and other unique models by the 1980s. Meyers himself relaunched his company in 2000, still relying on the first-generation Beetles that continue to ply U.S. highways.
Volkswagen isn't offering many details about the new e-buggy, but the teaser pics reveal that it picks up on the classic design first pioneered by the Manx, with a long nose, a stubby tail, a shortened windshield, roll bar and high side sills rather than doors. Knobby, oversized tires suggest that, like the original sand rails, the VW e-buggy concept is designed to operate both on and off-road.
Handout
Volkswagen's electric dune buggy concept vehicle
But there's at least one big difference between a classic sand-crawler and the e-buggy: the drivetrain. The Manx, and pretty much every VW-based buggy that followed relied on the automaker's simple – and famously reliable – air-cooled four-cylinder engine. The e-buggy concept, however, is all-electric.
MEB
The body is mounted onto a platform dubbed the MEB, a modular “architecture” that will be used for the majority of future all-electric products that the Volkswagen Group will sell through brands as diverse as Europe-based entry marques Seat and Skoda, as well as upscale Audi.
Two MEB-based battery-electric vehicles also will be produced for the Volkswagen brand in Tennessee, the automaker last month announcing an $800 million expansion of its Chattanooga assembly line.
Appropriately enough for this California-inspired concept, the MEB somewhat resembles a skateboard. Instead of mounting its engine up front — or in back, as with the original Beetle — the battery pack and motors are tucked underneath the floorboard. That approach lowers the center of gravity, making the platform more stable. It also means that space normally devoted to the engine compartment can be transformed into additional passenger or cargo space.
Greg Gjerdingen | Flickr CC
1968 Volkswagen Dune Buggy
While the e-buggy is being described as purely a concept vehicle, it wouldn't be the first retro-tinged show car the automaker has introduced with an eye towards production. VW revealed an all-electric take on its classic, hippy-era Microbus during the January 2016 Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas. It has since announced that what will be known as the I.D. Buzz will roll into showrooms in 2022.
Whether VW would want to get into the dune buggy business is far from certain. But the concept coming to the Geneva Motor Show might offer a hint that another once-believed model is ready for a revival.
The third-generation Beetle is currently winding down and will go out of production by the end of the 2019 model-year, Volkswagen confirmed last August with the debut of the “Final Edition.”
“There are no immediate plans to replace it,” said Hinrich Woebcken, then the head of the Volkswagen Group of America. But he left the door open slightly when he quickly added that “I would also say, 'Never say never.'”
Beetle fans will be watching the debut in Geneva next month to see if the automaker just might be ready to bring back the Beetle in all-new form.
Audi Announces e-tron Charging Service
The green light has been given for unlimited, trouble-free electric mobility. The Audi e-tron Charging Service is going on-grid in ten markets. The service will be rolled out in a further six markets in the first quarter and expanded in Eastern Europe over the course of the year. When driving abroad, Audi customers can charge… Continue reading Audi Announces e-tron Charging Service
Volkswagen ready to share MEB electric platform with rivals
Volkswagen ready to share MEB electric platform with rivals
Tesla profits, GM doubles down on EVs, Mustang and 911 hybrids: The Week in Reverse
2017 Tesla Model 3, in photo tweeted by Elon Musk on July 9, 2017
Which company showed a new hybrid system this week?
What new retro-themed electric car does Volkswagen plan to build?
This is our look back at the Week In Reverse—right here at Green Car Reports—for the week ending Feb. 1, 2019.
The news this week centered around Tesla, as it often does. On Wednesday, the company announced its earnings for the fourth-quarter of 2018, showing a loss of more than $1 billion from a difficult year when it struggled to ramp up mass production of its most popular car, the Model 3. The second half of the year was in positive territory. It also announced that the Model Y will roll out at the end of 2020.
Tesla CEO Elon Musk (r.) and Shanghai Mayor Ying Yong in Shanghai July 10, 2018
Tesla has built up its cash reserves and no longer faces an immediate cash crunch, but it still scrambling to balance producing and selling enough cars against selling them for enough money to remain profitable. To that end, Tesla revealed new lineups for its original Model S sedan and Model X SUV that use the largest battery but limit its range. The company also cut its prices by another $1,000.
2019 Chevrolet Bolt EV
General Motors CEO Mary Barra announced that the company will double its investment in engineering electric and self-driving cars as it aims to focus on the future and avoid another bankruptcy like the one that caught up with GM in 2009.
New tests reveal that more lavishly equipped versions of the new Nissan Leaf Plus will have significantly shorter estimated range ratings than the basic version.
2019 Nissan Leaf
Now that the federal government has reopened, along with the EPA, a backlog of new models waiting for official fuel-economy and electric range estimates before they can be certified for sale is beginning to move forward. And with the EPA back in action, Acting Administrator Andrew Wheeler was able to make new appointments to the agency's Science Advisory Board—including a well-known skeptic of climate action.
Volkswagen Geneva Show Electric Buggy concept
Volkswagen finally officially revealed that it plans to build a concept version of a long-rumored electric dune buggy to join the stable of its throwback ID Buzz electric microbus and a rumored electric recreation of the original Beetle.
Mazda revealed more about its plans to develop cleaner and more fuel efficient models that meet stricter upcoming standards, at an event previewing the 2019 Mazda 3. It's less of a plan than a scattershot collection of plans to keep this small automaker globally viable.
Porsche Taycan prototype
Porsche revealed that its upcoming electric Taycan will come with three years of free charging on Electrify America chargers, also owned by Porsche's corporate parent Volkswagen. A new report also revealed details of two hybrid systems to potentially be used in the next 911 sports car.
Oil giant Shell announced it is getting into the business of fast-charging electric cars in the U.S. with its purchase Greenlots and that company's chargers.
Chargeway Beacon – Forth electric vehicle showcase, Portland
A Portland, Oregon, startup company, Chargeway, has a new system to help newfound electric car drivers find public charging more easily. The company rolled out its first educational kiosks in a Portland trial project.
Electrify America had to shut down its fastest DC fast chargers last weekend—before any civilian electric-car drivers had a chance to use them—due to a safety concern. The chargers were back on within a day.
Ford hybrid V-8 engine patent
New patents registered by Ford show what could by the new hybrid system the company plans to put in the next Mustang and F-150 pickup.
And a report from the U.S. Energy Information Agency shows that wind power is on pace to overtake hydro as the top renewable energy source in the U.S. in 2019.
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This is what modern industrial policy looks like
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