Luxury car manufacturer Rolls-Royce has revealed its first electric vehicle and pledged to phase out combustion engines by 2030.
The car will be called Spectre and is expected to go on sale in late 2023.
Through teaser images released this week, it’s clear the Spectre will be a two-door coupe with a very similar body shape to the current Wraith.
However, details of its design are hidden by a graphic with a famous quote from company co-founder, Charles Rolls.
As part of the BMW Group, the company could have accessed the new electric vehicle platform being developed by the German firm, but instead it has stuck with its own architecture.
Rather than build bespoke EV underpinnings, the aluminium architecture that debuted on the Phantom in 2017 - and also used on the Cullinan and Ghost - will be adopted by the Spectre.
It was developed from the outset to be able to accommodate combustion engines as well as alternative forms of propulsion.
Powertrain details have not yet been revealed.
However, because Rolls-Royce doesn’t like to share parts with other manufacturers, it’s unlikely it will directly borrow the latest electric motors and batteries developed for the new BMW iX SUV.
That being said, it’s likely that these will form the basis of the Spectre’s powertrain system, but with Rolls-Royce-specific software settings.
The top-spec iX makes 516bhp and 765Nm of torque, with a range of over 340 miles.
Rolls-Royce Motor Cars chief executive officer, Torsten Müller-Ã?tvös, said: "Today is the most significant day in the history of Rolls-Royce Motor Cars since May 4, 1904. On that date, our founding fathers, Charles Rolls and Sir Henry Royce, first met and agreed that they were going to create ’the best motor car in the world’.
"Today, 117 years later, I am proud to announce that Rolls-Royce is to begin the on-road testing programme for an extraordinary new product that will elevate the global all-electric car revolution and create the first - and finest - super-luxury product of its type.
"This is not a prototype. It’s the real thing, it will be tested in plain sight and our clients will take first deliveries of the car in the fourth quarter of 2023."
Rolls-Royce has been experimenting with electric powertrains in recent years, building the 102EX and 103EX concepts.
It says these prompted questions from clients asking when a production version would come, as electric power is the "perfect fit" for Rolls-Royce.