Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Cars
  3. Emerging Tech
  4. Legacy Archives

As consumers clamor for its i3 EV, BMW may ramp up to make more

Add as a preferred source on Google

The i3 electric city car is BMW’s big gamble and, for the moment, it seems to be paying off.

Early demand for the car has been high, and BMW is thinking about increasing production, Bloomberg reports.

Recommended Videos

With a month to go before the i3 hits European showrooms, BMW has already taken over 8,000 reservations for the pint-sized EV.

“If demand holds, which is what it’s looking like, we will soon have to invest more,” BMW chief financial officer Friedrich Eichiner told Bloomberg at a press conference in Amsterdam.

BMW hopes to sell more than 10,000 i3s next year, but will “adjust capacity according to demand,” he said.

That’s good news for a company that has staked its reputation – and a considerable amount of money – on a radically new car.

Unlike other large carmakers, which so far have primarily based their electric cars on existing platforms, BMW decided to build the i3 from scratch. With its carbon fiber-reinforced plastic crash structure and separate aluminum chassis, the i3 has very little in common with most BMW cars.

According to Automotive News (sub. required), BMW has invested at least $2.7 billion in i3 development.

If the i3 proves to be a sales success, it may indicate that electric cars have reached a tipping point.

One of the major drawbacks to current EVs is range anxiety, and with an estimated range of 80 to 100 miles, the i3 doesn’t dramatically improve on existing cars like the Nissan Leaf. For significantly better range, drivers still have to step up to a Tesla Model S.

To deal with range anxiety, BMW will offer the i3 with a range-extending gasoline engine (although it doesn’t think most customers will partake) and offering to arrange loaner cars for longer trips.

Whether the early enthusiasm for the i3 stems from consumers who firmly believe the i3 has adequate range, or from people who are just enamored with the car’s newness, is unclear.

Like many other green cars, the i3 is different, and thus fashionable. BMW hopes its unique exterior and interior styling will reboot people’s idea of what a luxury car can be; for now, consumers seem to be buying into the novelty.

We’re eager to see if that novelty holds as the i3 enters the real world. Production has already begun; the i3 will arrive in U.S. showrooms next spring.

Stephen Edelstein
Stephen is a freelance automotive journalist covering all things cars. He likes anything with four wheels, from classic cars…
Mercedes-Benz and Chipolo made a key tracker to match your car fob
Chipolo’s Mercedes-Benz tracker supports Apple Find My and Google Find Hub
Chipolo Loop Bluetooth tracker attached to car key

If you own a Mercedes-Benz or just like the brand enough to want your accessories to match, Chipolo’s latest Loop tracker is made with you in mind. The two brands have teamed up on a new premium Bluetooth tracker designed specifically for Mercedes-Benz car keys. The tracker has a black matte shell, a brushed metal key hook, and a chrome Mercedes-Benz logo on the front.

Other than using it for your car keys, you can also hook it up to your handbag, backpack, suitcase, or travel pouch, and use it like a general-purpose tracker.

Read more
Samsung’s OLED tech gives the Ferrari Luce a dashboard unlike anything in a car before
Samsung Display just put its best display work not in a phone, but in a Ferrari.
Ferrari Luce

Ferrari just unveiled the Luce, its first all-electric car, and its design has been really divisive. Designed by former Apple design chief Jony Ive, the car is definitely turning heads, and not all for the right reasons. 

That said, while the exterior design is controversial, very few people can deny that the car's interior is unlike anything you have seen before. One of the first things that stands out is the futuristic display aesthetic.

Read more
Ferrari’s first EV is here, and the Luce might be the brand’s most controversial car yet
Ferrari enters the EV era with the polarising new Luce
Ferrari Luce

Ferrari has officially entered the electric era with the unveiling of the all-new Ferrari Luce, the first fully electric production car in the company’s history. Revealed in Rome, the Luce marks one of the biggest shifts the Maranello-based automaker has made since the company was founded in 1939.

For years, Ferrari resisted going fully electric. The company repeatedly argued that emotion, sound, and driver engagement were core to the Ferrari experience, something enthusiasts believed could not exist without a combustion engine. Even when rivals like Porsche launched EVs such as the Porsche Taycan and brands like Lamborghini began discussing electrification strategies, Ferrari largely stayed focused on hybrids and traditional performance cars.

Read more