Porsche stops making diesel cars

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https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-45619994

The German carmaker Porsche says it will stop making diesel cars, and concentrate on petrol, electric and hybrid engines instead.

It follows a 2015 scandal in which its parent company, Volkswagen, admitted it had cheated emissions tests for diesel engines.

Diesel cars over a certain age have been banned in parts of some German cities in a bid to cut pollution.

The Porsche chief executive said the company was "not demonising diesel".

"It is and will remain an important propulsion technology," Oliver Blume said.

"We as a sports car manufacturer, however, for whom diesel has always played a secondary role, have come to the conclusion that we would like our future to be diesel-free.

"Petrol engines are well suited for sporty driving."

Existing diesel car customers would continue to be served, he said.

Porsche did not build its own diesel engines, preferring to use Audi ones.

"Nevertheless, Porsche's image has suffered, Mr Blume said.

"The diesel crisis caused us a lot of trouble."

A German public prosecutor fined Volkswagen €1bn (£900m) earlier this year, after finding the company had sold more than 10 million cars with emissions-test cheating software installed, between 2007 and 2015.

The company had already set aside $30bn (£23bn) to settle fines, compensation and buying back cars in the US.

Porsche is understood to be developing a fully-electric luxury car, with a multi-billion euro investment.

The first car ever designed by its founder, in 1898, was electric. It was rediscovered in a garage a few years ago.

The company's first diesel car was sold just 10 years ago.
 

Blowski

Cupra 280 DSG
Mar 23, 2018
420
200
You can understand their stance but they need to get around the Cayenne elephant in the room. That car is their saviour and cash cow and I think most of the ones they sell are diesels despite the hybrid offering.

Some marketing to shift the balance is needed


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Deleted member 103408

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Well As they are part of the VAG group (and in reality the Porsche Family own the majority from memory) I suspect they are just
distancing themselves from the nasty smell of the VW Mess.

Aston Martin (who will soon be a public traded company) do very well without it so Porche can go back to good old days with no issues.

I think the bigger question is what happens after electric as realistically if we all went electric the power delivery systems (eg national grid in uk) would fail because they could not cope with everybody coming home at 6 and plugging the car in.

My local House Electrician has already said the new rules he has to follow are telling him guaranteed supply of power is no longer possible and the house systems have to be able to cope with the fluctuating supply.....
 

Blowski

Cupra 280 DSG
Mar 23, 2018
420
200
I’ve always thought the national grid would rather people didn’t come home home and plug in their Nissan Notes and Golf GTE’s due to drain on the supply.

No mention of a date from Porsche, I do think they need tread carefully and I’m sure they know and have considered the margin the Cayenne gives them to invest in their more prestige models.

Interesting times ahead and at a time when the diesel in the SQ7 moves the game on and would probably suit the Cayenne.


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Deleted member 103408

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check out https://www.theverge.com/2018/9/23/...g-diesel-vehicles-electric-hybrids-dieselgate

Porsche says that it’s getting out of the diesel business — for good. In a release this morning, it explains that amidst falling demand for diesel vehicles, and a growing interest in hybrids, it “has decided to no longer offer diesel propulsion in future.”

Porsche CEO Oliver Blume notes that his company isn’t “demonising diesel” with the announcement, and says that the fuel still important worldwide, even though it’s never been a huge part of the company’s offerings. There’s been indications of this attitude in recent months: the German automaker has been increasingly interested in electric and hybrid vehicles. Last year, the company unveiled the 2019 Cayenne SUV , which was notably missing a diesel version, and later unveiled an updated hybrid model.
 
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