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Electrics, compacts share stage at Geneva Auto Show

FRANKFURT — Carmakers are hoping to give consumers a glimpse of the future at this year’s Geneva auto show as they roll out new electric cars and try to re-energize an industry facing serious challenges on several fronts.

FRANKFURT — Carmakers are hoping to give consumers a glimpse of the future at this year’s Geneva auto show as they roll out new electric cars and try to re-energize an industry facing serious challenges on several fronts.

The Geneva International Motor Show is taking place against a background of slowing sales in China, the world’s biggest auto market. A potentially chaotic departure by Britain from the European Union and the U.S.-China trade dispute could mean further trouble.

And add to those the looming disruption from new technologies such as autonomous driving and smartphone-based services that offer use of a car without ownership, as well as regulatory pressure to add more zero-emissions vehicles. In both cases, automakers are sinking billions in investment into areas that don’t yet bring them big sales volumes and profits.

The show opened to journalists on Tuesday and to the public from Thursday through March 17. Here’s a look at the major themes of the show.

Going electric

Although scarce on the road today, battery-driven cars headed for the market in the months and years ahead are much in evidence at the show.

One reason: Tough new limits on emissions of carbon dioxide, the main greenhouse gas blamed for global warming, take effect in the European Union from 2021, and get even tougher in 2025 and 2030.

Analysts say more electric sales will have to fill the gap. Yet that raises its own questions, not least consumer reluctance to buy electrics because of higher prices and concerns about the limited range and lack of places to charge them.

Honda will be showing a compact electric vehicle prototype while Volvo Car Group’s Polestar brand is showing off the Polestar 2, a battery-driven compact vehicle that advertises 500 kilometres of range under the European range test and is intended to compete with the Tesla Model 3. Audi will present its A6, A7, A8 and Q5 vehicles in hybrid versions, which combine battery and internal combustion propulsion. Daimler’s Mercedes-Benz has the concept EQV, a battery-powered van.

Bestsellers

While displaying the electric cars coming to market in coming months and years, automakers are also offering plenty of what consumers buy most now: less climate-friendly SUVs and the small cars that remain a mainstay in Europe.

Sport utility vehicles sell well and can earn strong profits for manufacturers. Volkswagen Group’s Skoda will show off the Kamiq crossover SUV with 95-, 115- and 150-horsepower gasoline engines as well as a four-cylinder diesel version. Mercedes-Benz has an updated version of the GLC, an SUV loaded with driver assistance systems.

Automakers haven’t forgotten small gasoline-powered cars, which remain a bread-and-butter sales category in Europe’s crowded cities. Renault has a new version of its Clio compact, and Peugeot offers a second-generation version of its 208.

Bring money

Geneva tends to be a place for high-end automakers such as McLaren, Ferrari, Lamborghini and Aston Martin to show off gorgeous rides with prices starting at hundreds of thousands of dollars.

This year is no exception: Volkswagen Group’s Lamborghini displays the convertible Huracan EVO Spyder, a sleek, low-slung machine that goes from 0-100 km/h in 3.1 seconds and reaches a top speed of 325 km/h. Suggested retail prices start at 202,437 euros in Europe and $287,400 in the U.S., not including tax.