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Porsche CEO Says Electric Supercars Will Win Out: Munich Update

Munich plays host to IAA Mobility, where mostly European automakers will gather together for the first time since before Covid.

Porsche CEO Says Electric Supercars Will Win Out: Munich Update
Electric vehicles displayed during a Mercedes-Benz AG unveiling event ahead of the IAA Munich Motor Show in Munich, Germany. (Photographer: Alex Kraus/Bloomberg)

Munich plays host this week to IAA Mobility, where European automakers and their suppliers are unveiling wares together for the first time since before Covid.

When Germany last held such a forum two years ago, it would have seemed odd to promote a car’s ability to shield passengers from viruses. Semiconductors weren’t on the tip of every auto executive’s tongue. Electric vehicles weren’t selling so briskly, and supply chains were functioning just fine.

Bloomberg News is speaking with the chief executives of Volkswagen AG, BMW AG, Daimler AG and Renault SA, as well as leaders of suppliers including Robert Bosch GmbH and Continental AG, about these topics and more.

Key Stories:

Porsche CEO Says Electric Supercars Will Win Out: Munich Update

Porsche Pooh-Poohs Push for Supercar Exception (3:50 p.m. Monday)

The CEO of Porsche thinks it would be a mistake if the European Union caves to the Italian government’s push to exempt supercars from an internal combustion engine ban that’s been proposed for 2035. 

It would be the wrong move on performance grounds, since “electric in the next decade will be unbeatable,” Oliver Blume told Bloomberg Television. He also suggested the likes of Ferrari NV need to play their part. “De-carbonization is a global question and everybody has to contribute,” he said.

Blume carefully answered questions about prospects for a Porsche share listing. Such a move would be up to the VW group, he said. “We have a lot of synergies, but there are a lot of opportunities in this direction.”

Porsche CEO Says Electric Supercars Will Win Out: Munich Update

Magna Closing in on Deals to Make More Models in China (2:23 p.m.)

Magna International Inc. is in advanced talks with automakers to produce more vehicles in China that could compete on the international market.

The Austrian-Canadian parts maker and contract manufacturer has been churning out cars for the domestic market for Beijing Automotive Group Co. since last year at a joint-venture facility in China.

The factory can make as many as 180,000 cars and is currently using around 35% of capacity for BAIC’s ArcFox Alpha-T, Guenther Apfalter, Magna’s head of Europe and Asia, said in an interview. “We have the option to take on carmakers who want to compete on the international market.”

BMW Sees Recycling as Key to Independence (11:24 a.m.)

BMW wants to get people talking about another part of the sustainability puzzle: how do you recycle and reduce the sweep of materials that go into making a car?

The automaker is touting its BMW i Vision Circular concept vehicle that it says vastly cuts the use of primary materials. The BMW logo on the front hood is lasered on, reducing the need for a badge made from different-colored cuts of metal or plastic. The vehicle gets its golden hue from ionizing the bodywork rather than applying layer upon and layer of color in the paint shop. And those love-them-or-hate-them kidney grilles? BMW is sticking with them; they’re just made of LED lights rather than steel.

“We will need fewer primary resources that will also allow us to be more economically independent,” BMW CEO Oliver Zipse said during the vehicle’s unveiling.

Renault Unveils Megane EV in Quest for Renewal (9:30 a.m.)

Renault unveiled the electric Megane to replace the aging Zoe EV that has lost its top spot in Europe to rivals pushing newer, snazzier models.

CEO Luca de Meo said the Megane was the manufacturer’s attempt to reinvent itself and “play in the major league” by attacking the all-important mid-size segment that accounts for around 40% of the European market.

The Megane will have a range of as much as 470 kilometers (292 miles) and can be fast-charged for 300 kilometers of range in about half an hour.

Porsche CEO Says Electric Supercars Will Win Out: Munich Update

BMW Boosts Battery Orders to Meet EV Demand (8:49 a.m.)

Porsche CEO Says Electric Supercars Will Win Out: Munich Update

Prospects for EVs are running ahead of expectations, judging by BMW AG’s decision to significantly raise its orders of battery cells. The German carmaker has lifted contracted volumes to more than 20 billion euros ($23.7 billion), up from 12 billion euros previously, according to its CEO. 

Trying to overcome supply-chain vulnerabilities is the main focus for the car industry as it gets hammered by chip shortages. BMW has fared better than others, but expects the bottlenecks to continue for “many, many months,” Zipse said in an interview.

VW’s Diess Sees Chip Shortages for Years to Come (8:33 a.m.)

Porsche CEO Says Electric Supercars Will Win Out: Munich Update

The CEOs of VW and Daimler are downbeat about how long semiconductors will be scarce and disrupt their production.

“Probably we will remain in shortages for the next months or even years because semiconductors are in high demand,” VW’s chief Herbert Diess said on Bloomberg TV. “The internet of things is growing and the capacity ramp-up will take time. It will be probably a bottleneck for the next months and years to come.”

Daimler CEO Ola Kallenius cautioned on Sunday that the shortage may not entirely go away next year and could take until 2023 to be resolved.

Valeo Promotes Its Premium Air Filters (8 a.m.)

Concerns about Covid-19 and air pollution are feeding demand for premium air filters for cars, according to Valeo SA. The French parts maker forecasts the market will grow by a third every year between 2020 and 2023, with half of all new autos fitted with the technology within five years.

Valeo says its filters will block 99.4% of viruses and 96% of allergens as well as ultra-fine particles, gases, fungi and mold. Starting next year, a premium German automaker that the supplier won’t name will outfit one of its models with Valeo’s air-quality diagnostic technology designed to detect pollution. Sensors analyze fine particles both inside and outside the car and activate an air recycling system when concentrations are too high.

VW’s Self-Driving Partner Talks Testing (8:30 p.m. Sunday)

Argo AI, VW’s partner developing self-driving technology, is just a few months away from starting to test autonomous vehicles on public roads in Germany, Chief Executive Officer Bryan Salesky said.

At an event hosted by VW’s CEO, the two debuted a test vehicle prototype. They’ve equipped the ID.Buzz -- an electric iteration of the famed microbus VW was known for in the 1960s -- with cameras, radar and lidar sensors that can detect objects more than 400 meters (437 yards) away.

Porsche CEO Says Electric Supercars Will Win Out: Munich Update

Mercedes Unveils the Electric EQE (6:30 p.m.)

Fresh off starting sales of its new flagship electric sedan, the EQS, Mercedes-Benz is following up with its second serious plug-in car: the E-Class’s battery-powered brother.

The EQE, launching in mid-2022, is the second Mercedes built off a new dedicated electric-vehicle platform, rather than underpinnings converted from a combustion model. The ground-up approach results in better range -- up to 660 kilometers -- and a roomier interior than the E-Class.

Porsche CEO Says Electric Supercars Will Win Out: Munich Update

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With assistance from Bloomberg