Stellantis has published its Dare Forward 2030 plan, which focuses on moving towards full electrification. While the plan also includes fulfilling all the company’s objectives and offering superb customer service, electric power, and zero-emission is the name of the game for the automotive giant.

The announcement mentions, all vehicles to come out from Stellantis’ plants in Europe will be all-electric by the end of this decade. In this regard, the company plans to introduce more than 75 battery-electric vehicles (BEV) with worldwide sales of these vehicles crossing five million units annually.

In the future, the automaker wants to go 100% carbon net-zero by 2038 with 50% by the end of this decade.

“Dare Forward 2030 inspires us to become so much more than we’ve ever been,” said Stellantis CEO Carlos Tavares. “We are expanding our vision, breaking the limits, and embracing a new mindset, one that seeks to transform all facets of mobility for the betterment of our families, communities, and the societies in which we operate.”

The Stellantis strategy comes with a few teasers of its battery-electric vehicles from Jeep and RAM, both famous for their gas-guzzling machines. The first teaser shows a Compass with a similar design and proportions. The small crossover will hit the assembly lines this year and sales would start next year.

The second EV is from RAM with little unclear images showing a battery-electric RAM 1500. It should hit the roads in 2024.

Since Stellantis is a big brand, going electric means we will see plenty of EVs in Europe and America very soon. However, we should know that the announcement only mentioned specific vehicles to go battery-powered. The company said “100 percent of passenger car BEV sales mix in Europe and 50 percent passenger cars and light-duty trucks in the United States.”

It means commercial vehicles will still be fuel-powered in both Europe and the USA. It will also exclude bigger medium-duty and heavy-duty pickup trucks from the automaker in America.  

Source and Images: Motor1