Lamborghini prepares farewell to its petrol engines to focus on hybrid and electric vehicles
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Lamborghini prepares farewell to its petrol engines to focus on hybrid and electric vehicles

The Italian automaker will gradually say goodbye to gasoline engines in order to focus on the production of hybrid and electric vehicles.

Faced with increasingly popular electrification of cars, the Italian automaker is beginning to say goodbye to its gasoline engines, making way for hybrid and electric cars. 

And the fact is that the goal of the Italian firm is to reduce CO50 emissions by 2% in the coming years.

For this reason, Lamborghini has confirmed that it will offer only hybrid cars by 2025, so it is preparing to “retire” its gasoline-powered units, which will be a gradual process.

Prepare your first all-electric supercar

Its plans include the release of the first all-electric supercar model in 2028.

The electrification project is ambitious, which is why the Italian automaker is investing more than $1,700 billion over the next four years. 

2022, last year for gasoline engines 

For now, the Italian firm has indicated that this 2022 will be the last year that Lamborghini is made up entirely of internal combustion engines. 

Thus, it will end more than six decades of market success and usher in the era of hybrids and electric vehicles, when automakers are increasingly focusing on phasing out gasoline engines from the market.  

That's why the Italian firm is already working on its hybrids, which will be launched in the coming years, and saying goodbye to its internal combustion engines. 

Lamborghini focused on hybrid Aventador 

Lamborghini is preparing its Aventador hybrid model for 2023, as well as the Urus, also a plug-in hybrid, but it won't launch until 2024.

But those are not the only models the Italian automaker will focus on as it is also preparing a Huracan hybrid model that will be ready by 2025.

Without a doubt, the plan of the high-end Italian car company is ambitious, and by 2028 it is preparing an all-electric model.

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