From JLR re-adopting its ancient 5.0-litre V8 to Rimac ditching EVs, the headlines seem to be changing fast
I think it has finally happened: I canât keep up with the car world. Sorry. I just suddenly feel overwhelmed.
Where to start? Well, Land Rover announced that it was dropping its straight-six petrol engine from the Defender, which from memory it introduced only about 30 minutes ago, in favour of a V8. Now, donât misunderstand me: I donât mind this idea at all. But the V8 in question is JLRâs own supercharged 5.0-litre one, which I thought it had replaced with BMWâs twin-turbocharged 4.4-litre one.
Then Mate Rimac, of electric hypercar fame and sometimes dubbed âEuropeâs Elon Muskâ by the press (I think I would sue if anyone called me thatâŚ), told the Financial Timesâ Future of the Car conference that the next Rimac is unlikely to be an EV. Which is weird, because thatâs what heâs famous for. But Rimac has sold only 50 of its planned 150 Neveras, see. Which makes me wonder how many Nevera derived Pininfarina Battistas (new special edition out this week) havenât been sold.
Rimac, who we like a lot here, is also against regulatorsâ measures to make all cars electric, telling conference attendees that he was âalways againstâ what he called âforced adoptionâ.
It was quite the week for alarming quotes on this theme. If Ford doesnât meet zero-emissions sales ratios in the UK, it will restrict supply of ICE vehicles and âsell these vehicles somewhere elseâ, said Martin Sander, Ford of Europeâs EV chief.
âWe canât push EVs into the market against demand,â said Sander, ruling out paying fines for not meeting minimum zero-emissions car sales quantities (they would be ÂŁ15,000 per car) or selling off EVs cheaply to make up the numbers.
As we reported recently, Stellantis chief Carlos Tavares has called the UK policy of enforcing a certain percentage of EV sales âterribleâ.
Both viewpoints come against a backdrop of China being expected to start dumping EVs here even more cheaply than they are now, which would put the wind up me as a car executive too.
Meanwhile, selling cars in China is giving car makers another headache, because they canât keep up with the marketâs price wars. Nissan has called it âa survival gameâ, and Iâm not sure it will win it when Chinese car makers instruct workers that âa small mistake is not allowed in 2024!â while theyâre at the urinals.
Apparently surviving for longer than expected, though, will be the Volkswagen Polo. A relaxation of the proposed Euro 7 emissions regulations, which would have spelled the end of profitability for the Polo, and presumably other affordable cars, should enable it to stay on sale until 2030. The Euro 7 regs have become softer Euro 6e ones, which Volkswagen CEO Thomas Schäfer called ânot as crazyâ.
However, added Schäfer, what will still âadd costs tremendouslyâ are the EUâs General Safety Regulations 2, which mandate monitoring systems â which get turned off, because theyâre deeply irritating. âTheyâre expensive and people donât want them,â one engineer recently told me.
Whether youâll be able to buy the Polo youâd like to in the UK, though, of course depends on whether Volkswagen will manage to sell enough EVs alongside them. Fifteen grand per car for not meeting the ZEV mandate is a bit of a burden â unless youâre buying a Bugatti, whose next car will have some electrification but apparently also a new metre-long naturally aspirated V16 engine.
I mean, that sounds great, but blimey, really? Itâs 8.3 litres, they say. This is the sort of news that would once have knocked me sideways for a week but which is now barely a passing thought, because a Land Rover gets an old V8, a Chinese factory worker canât take a leak in peace and it might not be unrealistic to think that, when trying to buy the car they want, people will soon decide âfine, Iâll pay another 15 grandâ.
The wild thing is that somehow car makers, stronger of mind and character than me, will navigate all of this and in the midst of it all still manage to produce cars that we want.
Source: Autocar