By Gilles Guillaume PARIS (Reuters) - Dacia, the low-cost brand of French carmaker Renault, plans to stick to thermal engines for as long as it can and help drivers reluctant to switch to electric engines, chief executive officer Denis Le Vot said in an interview with Reuters.
By Gilles Guillaume
PARIS (Reuters) -Dacia, the low-cost brand of French carmaker Renault, plans to stick to thermal engines for as long as it can while the rest of the group bets strongly on going electric, Chief Executive Denis Le Vot told Reuters.
While Renault plans to go fully electric in 2030, Dacia will retain the possibility of making the big jump only by 2035, when fossil fuel engines will be banned in Europe, Le Vot said in the interview, adding that would help hedge the group’s electric vehicle push.
“Each has its role to play. Renault will push to be the champion of electric engines, this has a risk,” Le Vot said on the sidelines of a presentation in Le Bourget near Paris. “This is also why Dacia exists.”
“Depending on how fast the market converts to electric engines and of clients’ appetite, Dacia is here. The two can co-exist in an intimate fashion,” he said.
Dacia has only one electric model, Dacia Spring, which accounts for 12% of its order intakes.
While it continues to bank on small engines powered by fossil fuel and liquefied petroleum gas, which make up a third of the brand’s sales, Dacia plans to offer a first hybrid model in 2023.
Renault, which was a pioneer along with alliance partner Nissan in the electric car engines sector a decade ago, has recently been dethroned by newcomers such as Tesla.
In a bid to rebound, Renault will unveil later this year its plan to create separate divisions for electric and combustion engine vehicles.
(Reporting by Gilles Guillaume, writing by Dominique Vidalon, Editing by Ingrid Melander, Sherry Jacob-Phillips and Susan Fenton)
Reuters, the news and media division of Thomson Reuters, is the world’s largest international multimedia news provider reaching more than one billion people every day. Reuters provides trusted business, financial, national, and international news to professionals via Thomson Reuters desktops, the world's media organizations, and directly to consumers at Reuters.com and via Reuters TV. Learn more about Thomson Reuters products: