The original concept version of the Maserati Alfieri. There will soon be all-electric versions of both the production coupe and convertible.

Things are looking blue at Maserati. Make that Maserati Blue, the name of the new brand-within-a-brand the Italian automaker plans to launch during the next several years that will help it target Tesla.

Like all global automotive manufacturers, Fiat Chrysler Automobiles will be pushing into electrification over the coming decade, and that includes FCA’s two high-line marques, Maserati and Alfa Romeo. But rather than focus on “compliance cars” meant to barely meet emissions and mileage regulations, the Italian brands are betting they can focus on the performance capabilities electric drivelines offer and actually command a price premium.

Alfa, for example, is working up a 700-horsepower plug-in hybrid supercar. But it’s the more upscale Maserati that will make the broadest bet on electrification. “Everything gets electrified,” Maserati chief Tim Kuniskis told TheDetroitBureau.com during an exclusive interview. That includes four all-electric models that will be grouped together as the new Maserati Blue brand.

The new battery-electric vehicles, or BEVs, will include versions of the flagship Maserati Quattroporte sedan and Levante SUV, as well as versions of the upcoming Alfieri coupe and convertible model.

(EVs at the tipping point? Global sales could surge 25% to 1.6M in 2018. Click Here for the story.)

The Alfa Romeo Stelvio will get a plug-in hybrid option likely to be its fastest version.

“Look at our product portfolio and you see we’re going after Tesla,” minus the $35,000 Model 3 competitor, Kuniskis noted.

Maserati’s all-electric models will be accompanied by conventional hybrids and plug-in hybrids, as well, the executive said. That’s a critical part of the strategy the brand outlined during a presentation in Milan early this month – part of the broader, five-year plan unveiled by parent Fiat Chrysler.

With regulators in virtually every major market pressing for cleaner, more energy-efficient vehicles, Maserati is by no means unique in electrifying. But where many brands are charging in with so-called “compliance cars,” vehicles that will primarily appeal to green-minded motorists, Maserati is betting more traditional, performance-oriented buyers will actually be drawn to its battery-based models.

“When we bring out a plug-in hybrid it’s going to have a performance advantage,” said Kuniskis, revealing a strategy that makes future PHEV models part of the traditional “performance ladder,” starting with base four-cylinder engines, then moving up to higher-power sixes, eights, and twin-turbo eights. The plug-ins will be at the top of that ladder, where “I’m going to give you more horsepower and quicker 0 to 60 times.”

Kuniskis said a similar strategy will be adopted by the Alfa brand, though it has yet to identify which, if any, models will go all-electric.

The soon-to-come successor to the Alfa 8C will be a 700-hp beast using an electric motor.

For now, Alfa has confirmed that one of two supercars under development, the reborn 8C, will rely on a 700-horsepower plug-in hybrid drivetrain pairing an electric motor with a mid-mounted gas engine. The internal combustion side of the drivetrain is expected to power the rear axle, the electric side the front wheels, creating a “through-the-road” all-wheel-drive system. The PHEV system will also provide some all-electric driving range, helping comply with new standards in China and some European cities.

While Kuniskis wouldn’t discuss specific technical details for the GTB, the other planned Alfa supercar, it is widely expected to use some form of electrification to help it reach its targeted 600 horsepower. If not a plug-in hybrid, the GTB might opt for a “mild,” or 48-volt system similar to what rival Mercedes-Benz is working up for some new AMG models. The 2019 Mercedes-AMG E53, for example, will maximize the performance of its six-cylinder gas engine with a new electric turbocharger. Unlike conventional turbos that require the engine to rev up to build boost, the motorized system will deliver instant torque.

(Click Here for more about FCA’s plans to “plug in.”)

Tesla's Model S is the fourth-best selling EV in the U.S., and the target of the new electrification efforts by Alfa Romeo and Maserati.

As with Maserati, all future Alfa models will be electrified. That includes plug-in versions of the Giulia sedan, as well as the Stelvio SUV, explained Kuniskis, who heads Alfa Romeo, as well as Maserati.

Meanwhile, Alfa has two more crossovers in the works, a compact, or C-segment model, as well as an E-segment ute larger than the Stelvio. Both will be “electrified” in some form, Kuniskis hinted.

Asked how much of a share of future Alfa and Maserati volume will be made up of electrified models, Kuniskis was blunt. “Who knows? It all comes down to how you differentiate your product.” But, it’s “clear,” he added, that electrification can appeal to luxury buyers if marketed not just as a clean alternative, but one that delivers real performance benefits, much like a conventional turbo or supercharged engine option.

There will be skeptics, he said, much like there were when the first fuel-injected performance cars came to market in the 1970s. But that early resistance quickly faded as the benefits became apparent. “Then carburetors went away.” He expects the same thing to happen with electric drive.

In the meantime, the Maserati brand will have another “USP,” or “unique selling proposition,” Kuniskis added. Going forward, all of its products will be powered by engines provided by Ferrari.

(To see more about how dealers are hampering EV sales, Click Here.)

That has raised the question of whether Ferrari itself is preparing to introduce some electrified options. The supercar brand isn’t saying, but it is widely expected to plug into battery power during the next three to five years, whether with a plug-in hybrid or an all-electric model of its own.

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