BMW shifts into electric batteries and cost sharing on autonomous vehicles, exec says

Automakers are beginning to discuss one standard for autonomous-vehicle systems

FILE PHOTO: A model displays the charging plug of a BMW i3 electric car during the Auto China 2016 in Beijing, China, April 25, 2016. REUTERS/Jason Lee/File Photo
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German luxury vehicle maker BMW plans more deals with mining companies to secure electric vehicle battery materials, and is open to forming alliances to share the costs of developing autonomous-vehicle systems, the automaker's research and development chief said.

BMW management board member Klaus Froehlich said automakers and large suppliers are beginning to discuss how to agree on one standard for autonomous-vehicle systems. Mr Froehlich has said in the past automakers and suppliers should agree on a single standard.

"Everybody has an interest or should have an interest" in common autonomous-vehicle standards, Mr Froehlich said earlier this week during an event to show off a futuristic, electric and autonomous sport utility vehicle.

Mr Froehlich made his comments before a report in Automotive News on Friday that Volkswagen is interested in an industry alliance to standardise autonomous vehicle systems.

On batteries, Mr Froehlich said, BMW is pursuing a strategy aimed at securing lower-cost batteries than rivals, in part by controlling the supply of raw materials for its battery-making partners.

"We will have agreements with mining companies," Mr Froehlich said. "We have one agreement. There will be more." A key issue, he said, is securing cobalt from mines that do not exploit workers or employ children.

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BMW rode a wave of electric vehicle marketing this month by European luxury brands. The German automakers and rivals, including Tata Motors Jaguar Land Rover and Volvo, a unit of China's Zhejiang Geely Holding Group, are gearing up new electric models. The legacy automakers are under pressure from regulators in China, Europe and the state of California to field more clean vehicles. The European brands also want to keep more affluent consumers from flocking to vehicles made by Silicon Valley automaker Tesla.

BMW has previously disclosed agreements with Chinese battery maker Contemporary Amperex Technology and South Korea's Samsung. However, Mr Froehlich said those companies will supply batteries using a proprietary BMW design.

"In electromobility, you have to be a cost leader," he said. "If you are not a cost leader you will not survive."

BMW on Saturday showed off the electric, autonomous "Vision iNext" SUV in Beijing as part of a publicity tour in which the prototype car and a stage have traveled around the world in the hold of a Lufthansa cargo jet. The vehicle, with gas and brake pedals that sink into the floor during autonomous driving and touch-screen controls embedded in the rear seat cushion, hints at an electric vehicle BMW could launch among 12 fully electric models it has promised by 2025.

On Monday, Volkswagen's Audi brand plans a splashy launch for its e-Tron sport utility, the same day Tesla chief executive Elon Musk has said he plans to make news about the first passenger for his space launch company SpaceX's slyly named BFR rocket.