The unveiling of Ferrari’s first fully electric vehicle, the Luce, was meant to herald a new era for the iconic Italian marque. Instead, it has ignited a firestorm of criticism from environmentalists and industry analysts who argue it is too little, too late. Meanwhile, Chinese EV manufacturers continue their relentless assault on European automakers, consolidating dominance in key segments with cheaper, high-tech offerings.
The Luce, a sleek grand tourer with a claimed range of 500 kilometres, represents Ferrari's tentative step into electrification. Yet its launch has been met with accusations of greenwashing. Critics point out that Ferrari’s transition strategy remains heavily reliant on combustion engines, with the Luce constituting a mere fraction of planned production. “Ferrari is selling exclusivity, not sustainability,” said Dr. Anja Richter, a mobility analyst at the Berlin-based Institute for Climate Futures. “Other luxury EV makers have already achieved carbon-neutral manufacturing. Ferrari’s supply chain still resembles a 20th-century factory.”
The backlash stems partly from Ferrari’s pricing strategy. At an estimated €450,000, the Luce is nearly double the cost of comparable models from Tesla or Lucid, yet boasts comparable performance. “The market has moved on,” noted a report from McKinsey published Tuesday. “Consumers now expect luxury EVs to offer advanced autonomous features, sustainable materials, and a comprehensive charging ecosystem. Ferrari has delivered a high-performance vehicle with a leather interior and a vague promise of future upgrades.”
The timing is particularly perilous. Chinese EV giants such as BYD and NIO have aggressively expanded into Europe, capturing 25% of the electric vehicle market in the first quarter of 2025. Their models, like the BYD Seagull (€12,000) and the NIO ET7 (€75,000), undercut European rivals while offering superior battery technology and user interfaces. “European automakers are trapped between high production costs and the need to compete on features,” said Dr. Helena Vance, Science and Climate Correspondent. “Chinese manufacturers benefit from government-backed supply chains for batteries and rare earths. They are willing to sacrifice margins for market share.”
European regulators are taking notice. The European Commission has launched an anti-subsidy investigation into Chinese EVs, though many economists warn that tariffs alone cannot reverse the trend. “The window for European manufacturers to invest in next-generation solid-state batteries and circular manufacturing has closed,” said Dr. Vance. “We are witnessing a structural shift not unlike the Japanese auto invasion of the 1970s, but faster and with more at stake for the climate.”
For Ferrari, the Luce controversy underscores a broader dilemma: how to preserve brand heritage while navigating a regulatory landscape that phases out combustion engines by 2035. The company’s CEO, Benedetto Vigna, has defended the Luce as a “statement of intent,” but investors remain sceptical. Shares dipped 3% after the launch, while BYD’s stock hit an all-time high.
The lesson from the Luce backlash is clear: in the electric era, luxury must be redefined. Performance alone will not suffice when climate-conscious buyers demand transparency, lifecycle analysis, and demonstrable progress. As Chinese rivals churn out affordable EVs with ever-improving specifications, European automakers face a stark choice: accelerate their transition or risk obsolescence. The planet, and the market, will not wait.








