Tesla knocked the U.S. luxury sales crown off BMW's head last year, ending the German marque's three-year reign in the segment.
But BMW plans to beat the American upstart at its own game. Over the next few years, BMW will add competitively specced battery-powered models to its lineup of sedans and crossovers.
Last year, electric vehicles accounted for 5 percent of BMW's U.S. sales, Sebastian Mackensen, CEO of BMW of North America, told Automotive News.
Mackensen predicts battery-electric vehicle share will "more than double" this year and outpace BMW's overall sales growth in the U.S.
"There's still a healthy and robust demand for plug-in hybrids, but [BEVs] will drive demand long term," he said.
Despite the expected long-term market shift toward battery power, Mackensen is confident of near-term demand for combustion engines.
"We're selling the Ultimate Driving Machine — that can be the ultimate combustion engine-driving machine, and it can be the ultimate electrified machine," he said.
Mackensen, 51, spoke with Staff Reporter Urvaksh Karkaria in April about BMW's business outlook, tightening emission regulations and the changing retail landscape. Here are edited excerpts.
Q: What are the top two priorities in the near term?
A: The transition of our business to expand into battery-electric vehicles.
The other topic is to continue to foster our business, including digital channels together with our [retail] partners.
What headwinds does BMW's U.S. business face?
The industry is in a transformation. We have a myriad of regulations coming our way. I don't know of any industry that gets treated similarly, where you can comply with one regulation and still be in noncompliance with a different one that targets the same thing.
All of this is happening while we are running at full steam. That is the biggest challenge for all of us: How you do even more things simultaneously?
You cannot stop doing A because now you must also take care of B. We must make the best out of it in the marketplace, sometimes together as an industry and often individually as an OEM.