Renault, Volvo Cars expand on vision for electric future

Renault and Volvo Cars this week presented their vision of future mobility, marked by all-electric vehicles and an increased dependence on digital technology.

Renault said that up to 90 pc of the vehicles it sells will be electric by 2030. And, to make EVs more affordable, it hopes to halve battery costs in the next 10 years.

“Ten new electric models will be conceived and up to 1 million EVs will be manufactured by 2030,” Renault CEO Luca de Meo said in an online presentation.

Volvo Cars, the Swedish automaker owned by China’s Zhejiang Geely Holding, also presented a comprehensive strategy that would have it become a leader in the fast-growing premium electric segment by 2030.

In a separate series of presentations, Volvo Cars said its cooperation with Swedish battery company Northvolt to improve battery capacity, which is key to extending EVs’ driving range. Later this decade, Volvo said, its cars could go as far as 1000 km before having to recharge batteries.

Volvo also said it expects to cut charing times almost in half by the middle of the 2020s. It plans to achieve that with the help of better battery and fast-charging technologies as well as software improvements.