Business

Porsche wants e-fuels to be on equal footing with fossil fuels

8.02.2023, 15:51

The German car manufacturer Porsche says e-fuels should not be more expensive than petrol or diesel in the future.

Barbara Frenkel, the carmaker's manager in charge of procurement, said she expects politicians to either tax emissions from high-carbon fuels or give e-fuels a bonus for carbon dioxide (CO2) avoidance.

Speaking at an event for business journalists in Stuttgart on Wednesday, she said she would prefer incentives for e-fuels rather than higher taxes on fossil fuels.

E-fuels are synthetic fuels made from hydrogen and other gases using electricity.

Porsche opened a factory for e-fuel production in Chile in December last year. In a pilot phase, 130,000 litres of fuel is to be produced there, rising to 550 million annually by 2027.

The sports car manufacturer has repeatedly proposed e-fuels as a complement to electric mobility.

Porsche wants to offer 80% of its cars as pure electric vehicles by 2030.

Frankel insisted that the company's e-fuels plans are not a loophole to be able to offer the Porsche 911 as a combustion engine beyond the 2035 target set by the European Union.

She pointed out that there would be a large stock of cars on the road until well beyond the 2040s that would need to be fuelled.