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The BMW i3 will be Munich’s first mass-produced all-electric car. Image Credit: Supplied picture

Munich: BMW is setting its sights on the future, with plans to boost spending on electric cars and self-driving features in an effort to move on from the German auto industry’s diesel woes.

A day after agreeing to upgrade newer diesel cars and offer trade-in incentives on older models, BMW underscored its focus on managing the transition to an era of electric-powered robo-taxis.

The Munich-based manufacturer has also taken on a more combative tone, pointing the finger at rivals Volkswagen AG and Daimler AG as being behind the curve.

“No established competitor has been able to put as many electrified vehicles onto the roads as we have,” Chief Executive Officer Harald Krueger said Thursday. The company will also be able to build conventional, hybrid and battery-powered variants on the same assembly lines, with such flexibility being a “key to success in times of volatility and uncertain forecasts,” he said.

BMW had the most decisive response to the emergency diesel talks in Berlin on Wednesday, announcing an offer of 2,000 euros ($2,400; Dh8,816) to trade in older diesel cars for an electrified or new diesel model while Volkswagen and Daimler lacked details.

BMW is also the only carmaker offering an EU-wide incentive, Krueger said on a conference call.

Despite the strains of what the company calls “the largest model offensive” in its history, BMW is maintaining growth. Earnings before interest and taxes rose 7.5 per cent to 2.93 billion euros in the second quarter, as the revamped 5-Series sedan helped lift auto margins to 9.7 per cent from 9.5 per cent.

On track

“This solid result shows that BMW, despite the diesel discussion, is well on track operationally,” said Marc-Rene Tonn, a Hamburg-based analyst at Warburg Research. “They’re doing their homework and are coming up with strong models.”

The maker of BMW, Mini and Rolls-Royce cars also has a lower burden to bear in the deal with the German government, recalling 300,000 cars compared with 900,000 for Daimler and 3.8 million for Volkswagen.

Krueger, who repeatedly insisted that his company’s cars are cleaner than rivals, literally sought to distance himself from his counterparts by standing a noticeable distance from Volkswagen’s Matthias Mueller and Daimler’s Dieter Zetsche during a press conference to present the results of Germany’s unprecedented diesel summit.