Currently reading: Volkswagen licences electric platform to German start-up

German firm e.Go mobile is planning to build a 'fun' new car that makes use of the VW Group's electric architecture

German start-up e.Go Mobile has become the first company to secure the rights to use the Volkswagen Group’s MEB platform as the basis for its own electric vehicles.

Volkswagen is gearing up to launch the first vehicle based on the MEB electric architecture, the ID hatch, later this year, and has been open about its desire to provide the platform to other firms to build vehicles on.

The tie-up was announced at the Geneva motor show, where Volkswagen is showing the ID Buggy concept, which is designed to showcase the flexibility of the MEB platform and how it could be used by small-scale firms.

e.Go, based in Aachen, Germany, was founded in 2015, and is currently developing a small four-seat EV city car called the Life, which has been designed to make extensive use of off-the-shelf parts from outside suppliers, including Bosch for its electric motor, to reduce development costs. The starting price is €15,900 (£13,600) including taxes but other versions are offered with greater range, including a 60kW version for €19,900 (£17,100).

e.Go is aiming to develop a new longer version of the e.Go Life called the Life L that would use an entry-level version of the MEB architecture as it’s base and the company’s distinctive aluminium spaceframe body and plastic panels on top of the VW running gear, company boss Gunther Schuh told Autocar at the Geneva motor show.

Schuh said: “We can contribute e.Go’s agile product development and our strength in building small-series vehicles,” adding “the MEB platform will make us faster, more robust and cost-efficient.”

To that end, the company will incorporate several MEB components into its small 3.35-metre-long Life city car but that car is too small to be wholly based on the MEB architecture. The larger L model will also still be smaller than the VW ID hatchback, meaning there will be no overlap between e.Go and VW models in size. 

As well as developing his own MEB car and using its components on another, e.Go is also understood to be in the running to build a production version of the VW ID Buggy concept that would see e.Go engineer and build the car for VW using its expertise as a low volume car making specialist. That is one of three models that VW is assessing for low volume production for which it could use e.Go's expertise. 

Schuh, who used to do consultancy work for VW earlier in his career, added: “It’s not that complicated to build an electric car but it is difficult to build an affordable electric car. But an electric car must be emotion, not just rational. It’s not rational to have a buggy but you want one and can’t live without one when you’ve had one.”

Before starting e.Go Schuh developed an electric delivery vehicle, named the Street Scooter, for the German post office. He subsequently sold that machine's design to Deutsche Post, and is offered as an urban delivery vehicle.

Advertisement

Read our review

Car review

New long-wheelbase variant, with a larger battery, more powerful motor and versatile configurations, shows the ID Buzz at its best

Back to top

e.Go has previously made an electric kart, and is also working on an EV shuttle.

Schuh revealed that VW Group personally approached him a year ago to see if he would be interested in combining his technology with VW’s own, and after deciding it was possible, spent six months working with the giant to pass its competency tests.

Read more

VW ID Buggy revealed at Geneva

Opinion: why Volkswagen wants firms to produce their own electric buggies

VW's MEB platform: full details revealed

Volkswagen open to sharing electric car tech with rivals

Geneva motor show: live news and updates

Mark Tisshaw

mark-tisshaw-autocar
Title: Editor

Mark is a journalist with more than a decade of top-level experience in the automotive industry. He first joined Autocar in 2009, having previously worked in local newspapers. He has held several roles at Autocar, including news editor, deputy editor, digital editor and his current position of editor, one he has held since 2017.

From this position he oversees all of Autocar’s content across the print magazine, autocar.co.uk website, social media, video, and podcast channels, as well as our recent launch, Autocar Business. Mark regularly interviews the very top global executives in the automotive industry, telling their stories and holding them to account, meeting them at shows and events around the world.

Mark is a Car of the Year juror, a prestigious annual award that Autocar is one of the main sponsors of. He has made media appearances on the likes of the BBC, and contributed to titles including What Car?Move Electric and Pistonheads, and has written a column for The Sun.

Join the debate

Comments
2
Add a comment…
FRI2 4 March 2019

Autocar=VW=Autocar

Wow, another VW article - I guess Autocar can't exist with out the VW group....every VW article means more money .

tuga 5 March 2019

@FRI2

It's VW night dude, relax. 

Also, if you dislike it so much why are you making the same kind of comment on every VW news story?

Also also, this is legitimately Big News. I think most people where expecting Ford to be the first people they licensed the MEB plattform to, not some unknown start up that hasn't really made a car yet.