Mercedes-Benz aims to produce electric cars consuming as little as 10 kilowatt hours of energy per 100 kilometres (62 miles), its chief technology officer said on Thursday, a third more efficient than the current average for electric cars.
Speaking
as the carmaker celebrated the successful test drive of its EQXX prototype
vehicle over more than 1,000 kilometres from Sindelfingen in Germany to the
Cote d'Azur on a single charge, CTO Markus Schaefer said the efficient design
was key to maximising an electric car's range.
"First
we optimise efficiency, and then we can see how many battery modules we put in
the car," Schaefer said at a media roundtable, adding that customers
should be able to decide the size of the battery they want based on their
needs.
Carmakers from Mercedes-Benz to Tesla to China's Nio are in
a neck-to-neck race to produce higher range cars that dispel consumer anxiety
over the lack of widespread charging infrastructure for electric vehicles.
Mercedes unveiled its Vision EQXX prototype, boasting a 1,000km-range with a battery half the volume of its flagship EQS model, in January, promising that some of the car's components would make their way into series vehicles in two to three years time.
The car spent 8.7 kilowatt hours of energy per 100
kilometres on its 11-and-a-half hour drive to France, Mercedes-Benz said, about
twice as efficient as Mercedes models on the market and Tesla's longest-range
car on offer, the Model S 60.
Mercedes' EQS has the highest range on the market as of yet,
according to car comparison portal carwow, with 768 kilometres, followed by
Tesla's Model S Long Range with up to 652 kilometres.
"There'll be a further increase for some time before a
fall, which will happen once charging infrastructure is as available as petrol
stations," Schaefer said, although he declined to state what range
Mercedes was targeting in future models. © Reuters