Volkswagen has announced it will bring autonomous cars to the global market by the year 2025 at the VW Group presentation on the eve of the Geneva motor show.
CEO Matthias Müller said the brand aims to offer fully digitalised cars faster than its competition, and is investing in three Volkswagen Group Future Centres located in Germany, the US and China to develop relevant technology.
Müller explained that the carmaker needed to adapt its range so that future “customers, society and industry can benefit”. He suggested this shift would result in a line-up of cars that offer increasing amounts of self-driving ability, as well as connected technology and sustainable drivetrains.
VW Group is aiming to become the world’s “leading mobility provider”, and wants technology developed at its three new centres to make it to market by 2025. These centres will head research and development in new software for electronic vehicles and self-driving cars. It ambitiously wants to add 20 more electronic and plug-in hybrid models to its brands by the year 2020.
By 2025 self-driving cars in inner cities will be "common", according to head of digitilisation strategy Johann Jungwirth.
"Autonomous cars will revolutionise cities, going from crowded to empty by 2025 as cars park outside the city limits," Jungwirth said, also highlighting that those self-driving cars would be able to charge themselves while they wait.
The carmaker believes autonomous technology can save 1.25million lives because a reported 91% of accidents are down to human error. "Robots don't drink, get tired or make mistakes," explained Müller. He also said that people spend an average of 37,668 hours of their life driving a car. "Autonomous technology gives this time back."
He went on to say that all-electric ranges of over 500km (311 miles) are feasible by the end of the decade. “Charging will only take as long as a coffee break. In the long term, an electric car will cost less than an internal combustion engine car.”
Nevertheless, VW's CEO did admit that in the coming years, conventionally powered cars would continue to coexist alongside alternative fuelled ones. “Our experts have developed fascinating technologies – from three- to 16-cylinders engines. And here, too, we can and will get even better.”
The manufacturer did not provide an update on the emissions scandal, with Müller instead saying that a substantial report will be published in "the near future".
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