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    Ferrari’s first electric car may cost more than $800,000

    By the end of the decade as much as 80 per cent of the car maker’s new vehicles could run on batteries. The first is scheduled for 2025.

    Bernhard Warner

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    Gliding on robotic haulers, a line of Ferrari frames manoeuvres through a gleaming new factory in northern Italy. At each station, engineers in cherry-red uniforms add a component – an engine block, a dashboard, a steering wheel – as they transform the bodies into hybrid vehicles. Up next: fully electric vehicles.

    A lot is riding on Ferrari’s €200 million ($321 million) “e-building”, which went into operation last month and is almost twice the size of Rome’s Colosseum. The factory is intended to bring the 77-year-old sports car maker, known for the sonorous vroom of its petrol engines, into the age of electrification.

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