AUTOS
Daimler drops gas-powered truck to build CO2-neutral fleet
Published: Monday, October 28, 2019

Daimler AG is quitting development of natural gas-powered trucks to pool
resources for electric and hydrogen rigs that can advance its goal of
offering a CO2-neutral fleet in its main markets by 2039.

The world's biggest truckmaker is already working on battery-electric
versions of a range of commercial vehicles, including the heavy-duty
Mercedes-Benz eActros that's set to start production in 2022. Tesla Inc.
last week said it's planning to start output of its electric semi in
limited numbers next year.

"Natural gas engines are fossil fuel-based and therefore a transition
technology on the road to a CO2-neutral transport," Daimler truck chief
Martin Daum said Friday in a prepared speech at a conference in Berlin. It
makes little sense to "spend a lot of money on something that does not have
a long-term future, when we can use that money much better elsewhere."

Hydrogen-powered vehicles should be available by the end of the next
decade, Daimler said.

The truck industry, just like automakers, is under pressure to clean up its
vehicles, leaving manufacturers struggling with high costs. Still, there's
little choice but to meet increasingly stringent regulation and a global
push to address climate change.

"Especially when it comes to climate change, we've seen that things can't
continue like this, and we as the auto industry are part of society and
because of that have the obligation to do something about it," Porsche
Chief Executive Officer Oliver Blume said Friday at a conference in
Stuttgart.

For truckmakers, paying for the transformation is getting harder with a
downturn in the truck cycle taking hold as the global economy softens.
That's offsetting a boom in transportation demand fueled by online shopping.

Daimler's sprawling commercial vehicle operations, including the
Freightliner nameplate in North America, Mercedes-Benz trucks in Europe and
Fuso in Asia, face long-standing criticism for trailing profitability at
competitors like Volvo Group. Daimler this year turned the division into a
largely independent legal entity to make it more agile and nimble, as part
of a broader corporate overhaul.

Daum has intensified efforts to cut costs to channel funds toward new
technologies. The unit started series production of an electric city bus
last year and its Fuso brand just showed a fuel-cell prototype vehicle at
the Tokyo Motor Show in Japan.

"Truly CO2-neutral transport only works with battery-electric or
hydrogen-based drive," Daum said. "This can only be achieved if competitive
conditions for CO2-neutral transport are created for our customers in terms
of costs and infrastructure." *— Christoph Rauwald and Oliver Sachgau,
Bloomberg*
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