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Power Transportation

Mercedes-Benz To Go All-Electric By 2030 (nbcnews.com) 94

Mercedes-Benz maker Daimler plans to invest more than 40 billion euros, or $47 billion, between 2022 and 2030 to develop battery-electric vehicles, and be ready for an all-electric car market by 2030. NBC News reports: Outlining its strategy for an electric future, the German luxury carmaker said on Thursday it would, with partners, build eight battery plants as it ramps up EV production, and that from 2025 all new vehicle platforms would only make electric cars. "We really want to go for it ... and be dominantly, if not all electric, by the end of the decade," Chief Executive Ola Kallenius told Reuters, adding that spending on traditional combustion-engine technology would be "close to zero" by 2025. However, Daimler stopped short of giving a hard deadline for ending sales of fossil-fuel cars.

Daimler said that as of 2025, it expects electric and hybrid electric cars to make up 50 percent of sales, earlier than its previous forecast that this would happen by 2030. The carmaker will unveil three electric platforms -- one to cover its range of passenger cars and SUVs, one for vans and one for high-performance vehicles -- that will be launched in 2025. Four of its new battery plants will be in Europe and one in the United States. Daimler said it would announce new European partners for its battery production plans soon.

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Mercedes-Benz To Go All-Electric By 2030

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  • Is it possible to be smugly superior in an EV?

    • If you can afford a Mercedes, you can afford a car parking space with an electric outlet.

      Me? I'm still relying on nineteenth century technology electric vehicles - trams and trains.

      • Mercedes are one of the worst cars for depreciation. Some extreme examples will lose $10,000+ a year. So if you don’t mind getting your hands dirty they’re great cars.

        • by sd4f ( 1891894 )
          The true test of mercedes ownership is not the purchase price, or the depreciation, but rather the cost of maintaining it so that you can keep on driving it.
          • by glatiak ( 617813 )

            That was my experience... a beautiful car to drive. But the cost of maintenance was mind-numbing. It was a couple of years old when I bought it from a dealer but was mileage-light. Over time I was spending 10% of the car cost annually to keep it going. Sigh.

    • by drnb ( 2434720 )

      Is it possible to be smugly superior in an EV?

      Why not, it was possible to do so with hybrids.

  • burn, baby, burn! (Score:5, Informative)

    by Anonymouse Cowtard ( 6211666 ) on Thursday July 22, 2021 @07:51PM (#61610027) Homepage
    In Australia the ruling government actually went to the last election saying that the opposition wants to take peoples ICE cars away. Like, as a negative. And they won. Such stupid.
    • In Australia the ruling government actually went to the last election saying that the opposition wants to take peoples ICE cars away.

      Should be easy to promise not to. Trust is earned though. Did they even get that far?

    • by Roger W Moore ( 538166 ) on Thursday July 22, 2021 @08:42PM (#61610129) Journal

      In Australia the ruling government actually went to the last election saying that the opposition wants to take peoples ICE cars away.

      That would be an unpopular policy here in Canada too since all our cars are ice cars [guideautoweb.com].

      • That would be an unpopular policy here in Canada too since all our cars are ice cars [guideautoweb.com].

        Climate change is making ICE an impractical material for building cars. With badly needed subsidies one day all cars will be made from green metal and plastic!

        • Climate change is making ICE an impractical material for building cars. With badly needed subsidies one day all cars will be made from green metal and plastic!

          You mean we will run out of paint for blue, red, white, and black?

          When I lived in Texas I noticed that everyone drove a vehicle that was white, light tan, light grey, or red. Anyone driving a vehicle of a different color I assumed to be visiting. If the vehicles are all made of green metal and plastic then expect a lot of unhappy Texans.

      • Also with square wheels, buddy!

    • by Gravis Zero ( 934156 ) on Thursday July 22, 2021 @09:29PM (#61610231)

      In Australia the ruling government actually went to the last election saying that the opposition wants to take peoples ICE cars away. Like, as a negative. And they won. Such stupid.

      They wouldn't by chance be part of the conservative party, now would they?

      • They wouldn't by chance be part of the conservative party, now would they?

        No, it is the Liberal Party [wikipedia.org].

        In Australia, everything is upside down.

      • Oddly, the right wing conservative party in Australia is called .. Liberal.
        Yeah, I know. Weird, right?

        But I really don't think they are fooling anyone.
        At least I hope not.

        • by sd4f ( 1891894 )
          They did ban guns though, which is a bit out of step with right wing conservatism.
    • Such stupid.

      I'm without words. Apparently, so are you.

    • And they won. Such stupid.

      A person often elects based on one pet policy. People rarely do, and when they do they do so for varying reasons.

      The idea that the Liberals won because of this one lie is just stupid on the face of it. Hell man I voted for the Libs and I didn't even hear this claim.

    • In Australia the ruling government actually went to the last election saying that the opposition wants to take peoples ICE cars away. Like, as a negative. And they won. Such stupid.

      I drive an EV, owned a previous one for many years and a 90% electric-miles Chevy volt before that. I would like EVs to take over not because people are forbidden from having ICE vehicles, but because EVs get more capable, cheaper (both initial cost where they lag behind and TCO where they have a huge advantage) and more plentifu

    • Unless you get an replacement and they adopt said replacement it might be considered negative.

    • by tlhIngan ( 30335 )

      In Australia the ruling government actually went to the last election saying that the opposition wants to take peoples ICE cars away. Like, as a negative. And they won. Such stupid.

      Not unusual.

      People associate big powerful beefy cars with lots of noise and flash - race cars, for example, or the big muscle cars of the 50s and 60s.

      Wimpy cars are associated with quiet and economy - think the 4 bangers that became popular after the 80s.

      Of course, other people realized if you want efficiency, the big sound is ac

  • ..they are going to drop out of Formula One.. And if they have told Lewis yet?
    • That does make me wonder when Formula One will go electric. Currently there is no plan to do so and Formula E is a joke, but at some point in the next 25 years, ICE cars are going to become relics.
      • Formula 1 will continue with ICE for a while. Its a much better show then battery power. Someday Internal combustion will be for the very rich, much like riding horses is today.
      • Formula E is a very different concept. By design it forces the driver to regen a lot of energy (I've seen estimates about 30% of starting energy has to be regenerated) to even make it to the finish line. They don't still have the range to make races as long as formula 1 races but, even in the narrow street circuits they usually run, they still manage passing possible and the races can be quite fun.
        Of course it continues to evolve and soon we'll have new spec cars with more battery capacity and powerful mot
  • by leonbev ( 111395 ) on Thursday July 22, 2021 @09:22PM (#61610207) Journal

    Crazy idea, but before promising to switch their entire brand over to electric cars, shouldn't Mercedes release a few models that... you know... don't suck?

    Forget the fact that we don't have a nationwide charging standard or reasonably priced lithium ion battery packs for a moment... those things will hopefully be fixed over the next decade. What they really need to build a vehicle that people actually want to BUY over the ICE version before they can even think of switching everything over.

    • by timeOday ( 582209 ) on Thursday July 22, 2021 @09:28PM (#61610229)

      Forget the fact that we don't have a nationwide charging standard

      Well, Germany does, it's called LadensÃulenverordnung

      • Well, Germany does, it's called LadensÃfulenverordnung

        Which is another demonstration of everything in Germany having a long and barely pronounceable name. Which has lead to people just calling things by letter and "stoff".
        https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]

        That's a bit like in English using "N-word" for, you know, "nuclear". Or using acronyms for everything. The words radar, laser/maser/taser, and more that fail me now have become words that started as acronyms.

        Why can't the Germans use acronyms?

    • by shilly ( 142940 ) on Friday July 23, 2021 @01:47AM (#61610629)

      Reviews of the EQS have been universally positive. The obvious strategy for this EV was to see if they could build something that would live up to the S class brand, using a dedicated EV platform, and if they could do that, the rest of the range would be relatively easier. And the strategy appears to have paid off.

      • by leonbev ( 111395 )

        I was hoping for something affordable. That car looks like it's going to cost $80K. That's fine for an S class replacement, but not something that's going to have mainstream appeal.

    • shouldn't Mercedes release a few models that... you know... don't suck?

      Suck in what way? Be specific. What are your exact complains about e.g. the EQS, which may be overpriced and fugly, but hey that's core to Mercedes' brand and therefore not a factor. By all other accounts it's a pretty damn good car.

    • by Smidge204 ( 605297 ) on Friday July 23, 2021 @04:45AM (#61610843) Journal

      > Forget the fact that we don't have a nationwide charging standard or reasonably priced lithium ion battery packs for a moment...

      SAE 1772-2017 (Type 2 in Europe, Type 1 everywhere else) + CCS. Good for up to 350kw (more than Tesla's 250kw supercharger, and way more than any EV currently on the market can use)

      There's a handful of ChaDeMo stations out there in the US, which is a Japanese standard for fast charging used by the Nissan Leaf and one or two others that are no longer manufactured, but those stations were among the first modern stations installed in the country. Tesla is the odd man out. Doesn't mean there isn't a standard - Tesla just doesn't use it.

      =Smidge=

      • Tesla does use it in Europe
        • I believe they are legally required to, as the standard is enforced by the EU.

          I don't think that's a bad thing...
          =Smidge=

          • I personally find it great, as I can charge everywhere, if I need to. :) Probably more importantly, whoever provides chargers doesn't need to worry about which connectors to provide, aiding adoption. In fact, many publicly available chargers only provide a female socket and no cable, which is great for people pre-standard cars, as they just need to get the right cable. I assume the reason for that is not out of consideration for pre-standard cars, but because the cable is likely the part that breaks or is v
    • Crazy idea, but before promising to switch their entire brand over to electric cars, shouldn't Mercedes release a few models that... you know... don't suck?

      GIven that EVs are about 2% of the US car market, you could say that about every vendor. No one (and I include Tesla) has an EV I'd consider buying.

  • by Applehu Akbar ( 2968043 ) on Thursday July 22, 2021 @10:06PM (#61610329)

    Bayerische Motoren Werke announced today that it is developing a new BMW model that has turn signals.

    • Bimmers have matured over the years. Not nearly the exclusive club they use to be (and Japan's build quality is on par, if not surpassing).

      The new obnoxiousness on the road is pick-up drivers, hands down.

      Doubly so for pavement princesses.

    • by Hank21 ( 6290732 )

      Bayerische Motoren Werke announced today that it is developing a new BMW model that has turn signals.

      Nice, took me a moment, but nicely done - I laughed!

  • Electric Avenue!
  • Given that the EU has given a cut off of 2035 for internal combustion vehicles, I am surprised Mercedes hasn’t targeted earlier. Even with the 2030 date, this should give them 5 years head start to be ready for the new rules.

    The cut off: https://euobserver.com/climate... [euobserver.com]

  • ...until they go full non-fraud as well.

If all the world's economists were laid end to end, we wouldn't reach a conclusion. -- William Baumol

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