Once Considered Passé, Hybrids Roar Back as a Best-of-Both-Worlds Powerhouse
Regardless of the industry, pendulum swings are a challenge to navigate. In 2021, automakers faced one such shift when the European Commission passed legislation requiring a 55 percent reduction in the continent's greenhouse-gas emissions within five years. In response, many marques turned to hybrids as a bridge to an all-electric future. What was once perceived as a temporary fix may, however, prove to be the golden mean.
'The charging infrastructure in most countries is not yet mature enough to support convenient mass adoption of battery-electric vehicles, and in some territories never will be,' says Jonathan Hall, head of research and advanced engineering at U.K.-based consulting group Mahle Powertrain. While Hall stops short of calling hybridization ideal, he notes that 'when extreme performance is needed, then hybrids provide a more compelling answer.'
More from Robb Report
Flash Is Back: Extravagance Returns to Menswear Amid Economic Upheaval
Forget Tearing Down the House. Regenerative Design Is on the Rise.
How Sullivan Rutherford Estate Made the Best American Cabernet Sauvignon of the Year
Luxury and high-performance automakers seem to agree. Pairing an internal-combustion engine (ICE) with battery power results in more of a complement than a compromise. 'It preserves the sound signature and continuous high-speed power delivery of combustion engines while leveraging electric propulsion's instantaneous torque response and precision,' says Emilio Scervo, CTO of hypercar-builder Bugatti Rimac. Regarding Bugatti's new 1,800 hp Tourbillon hybrid, he adds that 'the electrical system enables sub-millisecond torque vectoring that mechanical differentials cannot match.'
Bugatti's siblings under the Volkswagen Group echo this sentiment. 'Hybrids haven't been a transitory technology in our view, but rather an excellent solution for our customers,' says Thomas Wasserbäch, vice president of Porsche's combustion and hybrid-drive-system division. Porsche, active in this space since 2010, just hybridized its iconic 911 for this model year. Lamborghini also joined the trend with the debut of its 1,000 hp Revuelto hybrid in 2023. 'The company doesn't plan to give up the internal-combustion engine anytime soon,' says CTO Rouven Mohr. 'We are also considering synthetic fuels to keep ICE vehicles running after 2030.'
Hall concurs: 'With the emergence of bio-based and even fully synthetic fuels, the link between the ICE and climate change can be broken.' Combined with the development of better batteries, this progressive hybrid model could offer the best of both worlds for years to come.
Best of Robb Report
The 2024 Chevy C8 Corvette: Everything We Know About the Powerful Mid-Engine Beast
The World's Best Superyacht Shipyards
The ABCs of Chartering a Yacht
Click here to read the full article.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Bloomberg
an hour ago
- Bloomberg
Farage Promises Non-Doms Protection From Tax on Overseas Assets
Nigel Farage's Reform UK party is offering non-doms full exemption from tax on their overseas assets for a fee of £250,000 ($335,000) every 10 years with the revenue redistributed to lower income workers, drawing a new battle line with Britain's traditional parties. Farage's proposal pits him against both the Conservatives, which last year abolished non-dom status for those who live in Britain but have their permanent home abroad, and the Labour government, which went one step further after winning the election last July by imposing inheritance tax on their global wealth.


Gizmodo
an hour ago
- Gizmodo
Say Goodbye to YouTube Ads Forever: Here's the VPN Trick You Need
Without YouTube Premium, you're doomed to watch ads every few minutes, sometimes more often. If you're exhausted by head-spinning ads, consider purchasing a YouTube Premium subscription. Sensible, right? Well, not for everyone. YouTube Premium's recent price increases made it unaffordable for many. People online have found a simpler way to block YouTube ads. You wouldn't believe it, but these two VPNs make YouTube ads vanish in seconds! NordVPN and Surfshark are renowned for their reliability. They provide exceptional privacy, streaming prowess, and compatibility with all devices. While both VPNs include ad blockers, they've become ineffective in blocking YouTube ads. Well, that's what most people thought. Namely, when you use NordVPN or Surfshark and connect to a server in Albania, YouTube ads suddenly disappear. Having tested the trick, we realised it's true. You may be wondering how this works. Avoid YouTube Ads With NordVPN As many people there have reported, YouTube doesn't display ads in Albania. Simultaneously, NordVPN and Surfshark work like all other VPNs. They allow you to connect to a remote server and use its IP address. Given these VPNs' strong presence in Albania, connecting to an associated server is a breeze. With the Albanian IP address, users can overcome YouTube ads and enjoy an experience similar to what YouTube Premium provides. Things like adding videos to the queue and playing videos with the screen off aren't there. At least, you won't notice any ads, allowing for uninterrupted entertainment on all devices. While YouTube is a big part of our lives, splurging on a VPN gives you much more. Watching YouTube without ads is just a speck in the universe of possibilities. One of them is very popular, and it's bypassing geo-blocks. NordVPN and Surfshark are particularly effective at streaming and unblocking many websites. They offer over 100 locations globally, with modern 10 Gbps servers and fast protocols to enable industry-leading speeds. Many people latch onto torrenting as a perk. Both VPNs are equipped with optimised servers for P2P. In addition, they provide MultiHop (Double VPN) capabilities for double the encryption and more security and privacy. All-around VPNs like these are fantastic for gaming, and you can even enable them on public WiFi networks for added protection. If you're an avid traveller, more privacy and ad-free YouTube enjoyment sounds exciting. No bandwidth limits mean endless possibilities, but more importantly, you don't need wealth to get them. NordVPN and Surfshark cost pennies these days, so you don't have to ditch your summer vacation for their subscriptions. Try Surfshark risk-free today
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
Why Danny Boyle shot ‘28 Years Later' on iPhones
Director Danny Boyle famously shot his post-apocalyptic classic '28 Days Later' on Canon digital cameras, making it easier for him to capture eerie scenes of an abandoned London, and giving the movie's fast-moving zombies a terrifying immediacy. To make his decades-later sequel '28 Years Later' (which opened this weekend), Boyle turned to a different piece of consumer tech — the iPhone. Boyle told Wired that by using a rig that could hold 20 iPhone Pro Max cameras, the filmmaking team created 'basically a poor man's bullet time,' capturing the brutal action scenes from a variety of angles. Even when he wasn't using the rig, Boyle (who once directed a biopic of Apple co-founder Steve Jobs) said the iPhone was the movie's 'principal camera,' albeit after disabling settings like automatic focus and adding special accessories. 'Filming with iPhones allowed us to move without huge amounts of equipment,' Boyle said, adding that the team was 'able to move quickly and lightly to areas of the countryside that we wanted to retain their lack of human imprint.' Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data