Currently reading: Industry plans for new small, affordable car class backed by EU

European Union president vows to support industry through new ‘E-car’ category as Chinese threat looms

European Union president Ursula von der Leyen will work with car industry bosses to develop a new ‘E-car’ category of small affordable cars in a bid to help safeguard the industry.

In July, Stellantis chairman John Elkann and then Renault Group boss Luca de Meo proposed creating a class of small cars with fewer safety regulations that would be cheaper to build and emit fewer lifecycle emissions.

The proposal was loosely based on Japan's kei car class, which accounts for around 40% of the Japanese domestic market.

At this week's Munich motor show, numerous car industry bosses – including new Renault Group chief François Provost, the BMW Group's Oliver Zipse and Stellantis’s Jean-Philippe Imparato – called for urgent action on current EU rules that will ban the sale of new ICE cars by 2035. They argue that this risks damaging the European car industry, which is facing a threat from aggressive Chinese rivals.

Zipse and Imparato both suggested plans for evaluating the lifecycle CO2 emissions of vehicles, rather than simply measuring emissions at the tailpipe – a move that would give car firms more freedom to use a variety of different powertrains while still reducing CO2 emissions.

In her annual State of the Union address, von der Leyen described the European car industry as “a pillar of our economy and industry”, acknowledging that “millions of jobs depend on it.”

Von der Leyen noted that the EU had already added flexibility to the 2025 CO2 targets that car firms must hit and added: “With respect for technology neutrality, we are now preparing the 2035 review.”

The German politician also gave her support for the proposed ‘E-car’ class, saying: “Millions of Europeans want to buy affordable European cars, so we should also invest in small, affordable vehicles, both for the European market but also to meet the surge in global demand. This is why we will propose to work with industry on a new small affordable cars initiative.

“I believe Europe should have its own E-car. E for environmental – clean, efficient and lightweight. E for economical – affordable for people. E for European – built here in Europe with European supply chains. Because we cannot let China and others conquer this market."

It isn't yet clear which powertrain types will be permitted in the new E-car class. However, von der Leyen said: “No matter what, the future is electric, and Europe will be part of it. The future of cars – and the cars of the future – must be made in Europe.”

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James Attwood

James Attwood, digital editor
Title: Associate editor

James is Autocar’s associate editor, and has more than 20 years of experience of working in automotive and motorsport journalism. He has been in his current role since September 2024, and helps lead Autocar's features and new sections, while regularly interviewing some of the biggest names in the industry. Oh, and he once helped make Volkswagen currywurst. Really.

Before first joining Autocar in 2017, James spent more than a decade in motorsport journalist, working on Autosport, autosport.com, F1 Racing and Motorsport News, covering everything from club rallying to top-level international events. He also spent 18 months running Move Electric, Haymarket's e-mobility title, where he developed knowledge of the e-bike and e-scooter markets. 

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Thekrankis 11 September 2025
It has always puzzled my why Kei class cars like in Japan have not been sold throughout the western world where lightweight, small size and economic running costs will be valuable attributes.
Dozza 11 September 2025

The EUSSR at it dictating what should be done. 

Andrew1 11 September 2025
Brexitard alert!
xxxx 11 September 2025

Bigoted alert!!!

Andrew1 11 September 2025
Bigger brexitard alert!
P Donnie 11 September 2025

True that!

cicalinarrot 11 September 2025

Your comment makes so little sense I don't know where to start.