Mercedes-Benz Group AG is broadening its battery-powered lineup with a sport utility vehicle that will take on Tesla Inc.’s Model Y in another step toward the automaker’s goal to go all-electric by the end of the decade.
The EQE SUV, unveiled on the eve of the Paris car show, will edge out the cheaper Model Y with 590 kilometers (367 miles) of driving range and start at around €70,000 ($68,000) when sales begin late this year. It’s the fourth model to use Mercedes’ dedicated EV platform, which also underpins the flagship EQS sedan.
“It’s the latest proof that we’re consistently executing on our strategy to go all-electric,” Mercedes Chief Executive Ola Kallenius said in a statement.
The SUV features a 141-centimeter (55.5-inch)-wide screen, and the high-performance AMG version will reach a top speed of 210 kilometers per hour. The carmaker also announced its vehicles will be the first non-Apple devices to offer a surround-sound system developed by Dolby Laboratories.
Mercedes plans to offer electric siblings for all combustion-engine models in its portfolio by the end of the year, then introduce three new platforms to underpin its cars, AMGs and vans by 2025. By 2030, it will only sell EVs in markets where phasing out engines entirely is possible.
To help fund this ambitious rollout, Mercedes plans to weed out lower-margin vehicles in favor of more profitable G-Wagon SUVs and performance models.
Chinese competition
The EQE SUV, which will be manufactured at Mercedes’ US plant in Alabama, debuted at the Musée Rodin in Paris ahead of a show lacking many western carmakers, including Volkswagen AG and BMW AG. Among those filing the void will be Chinese manufacturers led by BYD Co., the country’s biggest EV maker.
China’s EV manufacturers are increasingly seeking to make inroads into Europe. Nio Inc. this month announced plans to start sales in Germany, Denmark, Sweden and the Netherlands after modest success in Norway. Great Wall Motor Co. and Seres Group Co. also are part of the Chinese contingent exhibiting at the Paris show.
After many false starts by Chinese brands over the years, the transition to EVs could pry open the door to competitive European markets. British brand MG, owned by China’s SAIC Motor Corp., last year sold some 40,000 vehicles in Europe.
‘Robust’ sales
The carmakers proffering shiny new models in Paris are contending with low consumer confidence amid surging inflation and rising interest rates.
While its archrival BMW recently warned orders have started to slow, Mercedes said last week that sales jumped by 21% during the third quarter, with China leading a strong showing of growth across all key regions.
In an interview with Bloomberg Television, Kallenius called the third-quarter deliveries “robust” and said that while the economy “might cool down,” Mercedes will be prepared.
“We’re also looking at finishing this year off in a robust fashion, and then we’ll see what next year brings,” he said.
©2022 Bloomberg L.P.