The 'Godfather of EVs' explains why China is winning the race to go electric — and why hybrids are a 'fool's errand'

The ‘Godfather of EVs’ explains why China is winning the race to go electric — and why hybrids are a ‘fool’s errand’

Former Nissan and Aston Martin executive Andy Palmer is known as the “godfather of EVs” thanks to his work on the Nissan Leaf.Courtesy of Andy Palmer
  • Andy Palmer, the “Godfather of EVs,” explains how China took the lead in the electric car race.

  • Ex-Nissan COO Palmer got the moniker after developing the Leaf, the world’s first mass-market EV.

  • He says Chinese EVs offer “remarkable” value for money and have better battery tech than their Western rivals.

The man often known as the “Godfather of EVs” has a warning for automakers thinking of ditching electric vehicles for hybrids.

Former Aston Martin CEO and Nissan exec Andy Palmer told Business Insider that delaying transitioning to EVs in favor of selling hybrids was a “fool’s errand” and warned automakers doing so risk falling even further behind Chinese EV companies.

Palmer’s moniker comes from his time as Chief Operating Officer at Nissan.

He led the development of the Nissan Leaf, the world’s first mass-market electric car, which has sold over half a million units since it launched in 2010.

“I wish I could say that it was driven by a motivation to better the world. But actually, it was driven by the Toyota Prius kicking our ass,” Palmer told BI.

The Nissan Leaf was the first mass-market electric car.Peerapon Boonyakiat/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images

Rather than copying the success of the hybrid Prius, Palmer says he pushed Nissan to build a fully electric vehicle, eventually securing the support of then-CEO Carlos Ghosn.

Over a decade later, he’s skeptical of automakers — including Aston Martin, the company Palmer ran as CEO from 2014 to 2020 — who have taken the opposite path and turned to hybrids as EV adoption has slowed.

“Hybrids are a road to hell. They are a transition strategy, and the longer you stay on that transition, the less quickly you ramp up into the new world,” said Palmer.

“If you just delay transitioning to EVs by diluting it with hybrids then you are more uncompetitive for longer, and you allow the Chinese to continue to develop their market and their leadership. I honestly think it’s a fool’s errand,” he added.

Over the past few years, the auto industry has been shaken by the booming growth of Chinese brands such as BYD, which have conquered their home market with a range of affordable and high-tech EVs and hybrids and are now rapidly expanding abroad.

“The Chinese cars are bloody good. The Chinese vehicles offer remarkable value for money for what they deliver,” said Palmer.

“Their battery technology’s class-leading, and they’ve concentrated very much on their software,” he said.

Palmer told BI that the success of China’s EV industry was down to the country’s long-running industrial strategy.

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