The twilight of combustion comes for Germany鈥檚 empire of engines
Bloomberg Businessweek
The transition to electric mobility is an arduous and dangerous challenge for German carmakers, reports Elisabeth Behrmann in a . Using BMW鈥檚 example, Behrmann looks into the consequences for the company, employees, suppliers, and the national economy. 鈥淭he nation that invented the heart of the car at the dawn of the 20th century might struggle to adapt to the coming electric era,鈥 writes Behrmann. 鈥淭he end of internal combustion, combined with a decline in worldwide car ownership, could bring about an overhaul of the world鈥檚 fourth-biggest economy.鈥
German carmakers BMW, Daimler and VW have announced ambitious plans to convert car production step-by-step to electric cars. VW has gone furthest with targets 鈥 called a 鈥済ame changer for the industry鈥 by environmental NGOs 鈥 to make 22 million electric cars in the coming decade and go entirely carbon-neutral by 2050. Because production of electric engines is much simpler than making combustion motors, and because carmakers use imported battery cells, the shift to electric mobility could sharply reduce the number of jobs in the sector. The car industry currently employs around 800,000 people in Germany.