Renault Group CEO Luca de Meo and Stellantis chairman John Elkann have called on European politicians to reverse the mandated switch to pure-electric powertrains and to devise a more flexible industrial strategy that allows manufacturers to keep producing small, affordable cars.
In a rare joint interview at the Financial Times Future of the Car summit, the bosses of the two rival firms rallied against the EU and UK’s 2035 deadline for combustion car sales and said the decarbonisation of the automotive industry is contingent on a more flexible approach - rather than a framework of “deadlines and fines” that ultimately makes cars more expensive for the consumer.
Renault's de Meo said: "We are here to fight for the idea that small cars still have a purpose and they could be one of the ways to reboot the automotive market in Europe.
"The battle of the industry is to reduce the impact of transport. The obvious thing is to produce cars that have an overall lower impact, and this is the case for small cars.”
Elkann – chairman of Stellantis, which owns Peugeot, Citroën and Fiat among others – said the two rival firms are united by their heritage in small cars and their shared objective of continuing to offer affordable personal mobility: "If you look at what Renault does and you look at what we do with Fiat, Peugeot and Citroën, it's very similar.
“Our roots are in small cars that were really the driving force of prosperity in the countries in Europe where we belong - and the great access that those cases gave to many people to be able to enjoy the freedom that you enjoy with cars.
"We believe, with Luca, that 2025 is a year where European countries and the European Union need to decide if that's still relevant in the 21st century."
Ultimately, the pair suggest, European legislators should approach the decarbonisation of the car parc in a more holistic way, rather than mandating that every car should be zero-emission at the tailpipe by 2035.
This is particularly true in the context of small, affordable cars, which become inherently more expensive and thereby less attainable when fitted with battery-electric powertrains. That in turn makes them less popular and means would-be buyers are liable to keep their older, more polluting cars for longer.
The solution, as proposed by de Meo and Elkann, is to introduce legislation that allows for the production and sale of lower-emission, rather than zero-emission, small cars in the short to medium term - which would mean the price hike that comes with electrification would be more gradual, and thus more quickly reduce the CO2 output of Europe’s car parc.
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