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Mercedes to continue investing in separate ICE, EV platforms

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Mercedes S-Class (above) to get new gen in 2028; EQS sedan (below) used for representation only.

Mercedes-Benz will continue to invest in the development of separate architectures and platforms for ICE and EV line-ups as long as there is demand, CEO Ola Källenius told our sister publication, Autocar UK.

  1. There will be some compromise in converting ICE to EV or vice versa
  2. Investing in two versions does add some burden
  3. Already invested in new Euro 7-compliant combustion engines
Källenius further said that Mercedes must offer models “without compromise” in terms of equipment levels, space, technology, or performance, and the only way to do this is to offer bespoke architectures. He cited the next-gen S-Class, due in late 2028, as an example, saying it would be impossible to ensure the right performance levels and interior space in converting an ICE model to an EV or vice versa. "If you don't believe that the market is 100 percent electric at that point, you have to have the choice for both. You need to offer the electric and the high-tech electrified ICE version without compromise," he said.
 
"The only solution that we think is viable in that scenario is to have two platforms."

"The packaging advantages of the electric one are very obvious. If you put a combustion engine car into an electric car, you sacrifice space you wouldn't want to. Then, we've worked for over 100 years perfecting the combustion car," Källenius added.

"If you take a luxury sedan like the S-Class, it's the best-packaged car in the world. How you sit in the back seat is the benchmark, full stop. And we don't think the customers would accept going backwards on that. The customer comes first in this equation, and he or she is the true winner here. It's going to be the best of times for Mercedes customers in the next 10 years," the CEO said.

Källenius also admitted that "investing in two versions puts some burden on your investment," but,  "if you do it in an intelligent way, the marginal additional investment can be kept on a manageable level, and that's what we're trying to do".

To that end, anything that isn't related to the powertrain, its packaging, and the supporting electronic architecture will be made as common as possible between the two models.

The physical traditional hardware architecture is no longer the biggest investment in a car; instead it's the electronic architecture and software. 

The convergence of Mercedes's EV and ICE model lines has “already started”, said Källenius, with the new electric G-Class being called the G580 rather than the EQG, and this will continue in the future as the EQ sub-brand is phased out.

He also said that this wasn't a rowing back on a commitment to EVs but, in fact, quite the opposite. Mercedes' commitment to go all-electric was always qualified with a "where market conditions allow" clause, and those conditions aren't there yet and won't be for the foreseeable future.

Källenius admitted that he had been surprised by the slow uptake of EVs. Projections five years ago, at the start of Mercedes' EV roll-out, were that it would have around a quarter of its sales as EVs by now, but the market is less than half that.

Mercedes has already invested in all-new generations of all its combustion engine ranges to prepare them for Euro 7 emissions regulations and to hybridise them.

This, plus its investments in EVs, puts Mercedes in "a very strong position and perhaps one of the strongest positions of the established manufacturers" to respond to however the market evolves, claimed Källenius.

"If we now think that by 2030, the market is not going to be absolutely dominant electric, it would not make any economic sense to walk away from a large part of the market. If it's 50:50 [ICE and EV], you're not going to walk away from half of your business. Then you need to make sure that you extend your ICE strategy beyond the point that you had originally thought," he added.

Currently, Mercedes-Benz India has a vast portfolio that includes both EV and ICE vehicles. The brand has launched 12 models this year, with the latest one being the new E-Class. Additionally, two more new launches are expected before the year ends.

Also see:

Next-gen Mercedes CLA previewed ahead of global debut

Constant changes in EV taxation distort the market, says Mercedes India CEO

Mercedes-Benz India records 21 percent sales growth in Q3 2024



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