Engaged in the complete transformation of their range and threatened by young shoots, the brands Audi, BMW, Cadillac and Volvo are playing big these days. They dare a bet which it is not said that all will take up successfully.

The IAA Mobility in Munich is hardly your idea of ​​a traditional car show. Far from there. Here, the automobile is not at the heart of this event. This devotes as much space to bicycles, scooters and other environmentally friendly means of transport. But the Munich metropolitan region is also the stronghold of BMW and Audi (Ingolstadt). Two manufacturers who are revealing, for the first time, significant advances, which will have a significant impact on their future and that of the groups to which they belong.

BMW has been waiting for this moment to (re)introduce the “Neue Klasse” for months, even years; a name formerly used in the 1960s and 1970s and which in some way refers to the canvas in which BMW carves several model families.

By revealing the Vision Neue Klasse, BMW is giving a precise taste of the mold in which all BMWs will be made from 2025. This will merge electric propulsion, digitization and circular economy. Like simplifying the materials as much as possible by ensuring that the light will forge the identity of a model in the future and not the complexity of its bodywork.

The latter, moreover, is not revolutionary, but BMW defends its choice not to rush its customers with a design that is too “futuristic”. Failing to show on the outside the revolution it carries on the inside, this “Neue Klasse” does not lack ambition. Its electrified architecture promises to offer increased autonomy thanks in particular to the development of a battery whose cell design (ovoid) increases energy density by 20% and improves autonomy (30%). A gain that is added to others, equally impressive, in the field of recharging speed (30%) and software efficiency. Lots of numbers to confirm.

At Audi, the content also takes precedence over the container. Even wrapped up as it was a few weeks ago in the Faroe Islands where we tried it, the Q6 e-Tron, it’s clear, blends completely into the formal language of the brand with the rings. The thrill of innovation lies elsewhere. In the light signature, for example, which this time goes well beyond the garlands and fantasies of the same kind to which manufacturers have accustomed us so far. In the case of the Q6 e-Tron, the rear lights feature six OLED panels capable of generating a new image every 10 milliseconds. And among these images, we find in particular pictograms inspired by road signs. These allow communication with other road users in order to warn them of a potentially dangerous situation (breakdown, accident or door opening, etc.).

But the importance of the Q6 e-Tron lies elsewhere than in its lighting signature. This utility vehicle, whose marketing is due to begin in the fall in Europe, will in fact be the first vehicle to debut a brand new 800-volt electrical architecture (code name PPE). This will integrate several new features, including a charging capacity of 270 kW and a presumed range of more than 700 km (WLTP standard). This will then benefit all brands of the Volkswagen (VW) group, including Porsche, which will use it in particular for its future electric Macan. For Audi this is an important test. Good or bad, the performance and reliability of this platform could have a significant impact on the objectives that Audi has set for itself by 2030. And even more on the Artemis project (the PPE platform foreshadows it) whose release date is constantly reported by the VW Group.

At 6946 kilometers from Munich, Cadillac management also has an important card to play by electrifying its flagship model, the Escalade. More compact, more aerodynamic and above all more ecological, this Escalade IQ will certainly have a very limited distribution ($130,000 US, now imagine in Canadian dollars), but the important thing is elsewhere. Cadillac has been chasing after its glorious past for some time now and the Escalade IQ, more than any other model in its current lineup, could help it enhance its heritage. And also demonstrate that the brand is in no way destabilized by electrification. Although the Escalade IQ has several points in common with the Hummer EV (architecture, functionalities, engines, etc.), Cadillac nevertheless intends to prove that the electric vehicles of tomorrow will not be interchangeable, silent, odorless or tasteless. . Moreover, Cadillac is already preparing a suite with an elongated version (ESV IQ) and another, performance, to enrich its subsidiary V.

The Escalade IQ is intended, for the less fortunate at least, as a business card and a demonstration of technological strength. It is quite different with the Volvo EX30 presented ten days ago at the Montreal Science Center. This new entry ticket from the Sino-Swedish brand will invite consumers to express their interest (by making a reservation deposit) this fall. The first deliveries will begin in the second quarter of 2024.

This model in the making, which will originate in China, is based on a unique electrical architecture. Powered by a 69 kWh battery, which the EX30 claims to travel 443 kilometers on a full charge in its two-wheel drive (RWD) configuration. Innovative, functional and “funny fun fun” as comedian Marc Labrèche would say, this urban electric vehicle requires a higher outlay than some imagined. Asked by Volvo management to guess the starting price before its announcement, the collection of journalists at the preview placed their bets in a price range between $37,000 and $49,000. Wrong answer. The starting price is set at $53,700.