German carmaker Volkswagen to develop small electric car for the masses

The new car to be available for a price ranging between €20,000 and €25,000

Volkswagen is racing to develop a purely-battery powered car around the size of a Polo which will be available for between €20,000 and 25,000. Hendrik Schmidt / EPA
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Volkswagen is bringing forward the development of a small electric car for the mass market in anticipation of tougher climate regulations, according to plans seen by Reuters, as it seeks to boost sales in a new green era.

Under the project dubbed "Small BEV (Battery Electric Vehicle)", engineers are racing to develop a purely-battery powered car around the size of a Polo which will be available for between €20,000 and 25,000 ($24,000-30,000).

This would make it cheaper than Volkswagen's ID.3 electric car, which went on sale in September.

Volkswagen did not provide details on what the vehicle might look like, when it might be launched or where it might be built.

The carmaker has said the European Union's more stringent emissions targets will force it to boost the proportion of hybrid and electric vehicles in its European car sales to 60 per cent by 2030, up from a previous target of 40 per cent.

Earlier this month, it raised its planned investment on digital and electric vehicle technologies to €73 billion over the next five years, of which around €35bn will be invested in e-mobility.

The VW brand currently plans to build 1.5 million electric cars by 2025.