FRANKFURT -- German automaker Volkswagen said Tuesday it plans to ramp up its production of electric vehicles over the next ten years to 22 million and reduce its carbon footprint over vehicle life cycles by 30 per cent.
Previously, the company said it would aim for 15 million. That was ambitious in itself given that it made fewer than 50,000 battery-only vehicles last year.
The company is pivoting to electric vehicles as it seeks to comply with new limits on carbon dioxide emissions in Europe, and a push by China for more low-emission vehicles.
The company also disclosed that operating profit at its core Volkswagen brand, one of 12, fell to 3.2 billion euros ($3.6 billion) from 3.3 billion last year as the company faced bottlenecks certifying vehicles under new emissions tests.
The company said operating results for the group in 2018 rose 0.4 per cent to 17.1 billion euros on sales that rose 2.7 per cent to 235.8 billion euros. Net profit for the year rose 6 per cent to 12.2 billion euros.
CEO Herbert Diess said at the company's annual news conference that the company met its profit goal with an operating margin of 7.3 per cent.