
A possible cancellation of an electric Boxster could mark a major shift in Porsche’s EV strategy. According to Bloomberg, Porsche is weighing whether to cancel the planned electric versions of the 718 Boxster and 718 Cayman as it tries to rein in costs, and the decision has not been finalized.
The primary driver behind this rethink appears to be cost. Developing electric versions of the 718 models has proven far more expensive and technically demanding than anticipated. Combining low weight, sharp handling, strong performance, and usable driving range in a compact electric sports car has turned out to be a difficult equation.
Porsche has also faced development delays and rising expenses on the project. These challenges have pushed timelines back and increased budget pressure.
Market Reality Is Hitting Harder Than Expected
External conditions have also worsened. Demand in China, long one of Porsche’s most important growth markets, has softened. At the same time, global EV adoption is growing more slowly than forecasts from just a few years ago suggested.
Porsche has not been immune. While the Porsche Taycan proved that an electric Porsche can work from a brand perspective, its deliveries fell in 2025, with Porsche reporting 16,339 Taycan deliveries worldwide, down 22% year over year. The electric Porsche Macan remains strategically important, and Porsche reported that over half of Macan deliveries in 2025 were fully electric.
A New Focus Under New Leadership
In this context, CEO Michael Leiters appears to be drawing clear lines. Rather than pursuing broad and costly electrification across the entire lineup, Porsche is shifting its focus toward profitability and margin stability.
Projects that do not promise near-term returns or that carry high execution risk are increasingly under scrutiny. The electric Boxster fits that description perfectly. It is emotionally important and technologically exciting, but difficult to justify economically under current conditions.
Part Of A Broader Industry Recalibration
Porsche is far from alone. Across the industry, automakers are revising electrification plans, delaying models, or canceling them outright. This is not because EVs have failed, but because the transition is proving more expensive and slower than initially assumed.
In the premium and sports car segments especially, the challenge of balancing driving dynamics, range, weight, and cost has become increasingly clear. That reality forces even brands like Porsche to ask whether maintaining legacy powertrains for longer might offer more stability in the short to medium term.
LATEST POSTS
- 1
Computerized Strengthening d: A Survey of \Upgrading Efficiency\ Programming Application - 2
The 12 biggest space stories of 2025 — according to you - 3
Father and son spending Christmas together after health scares - 4
Becoming Familiar with an Unknown dialect: My Language Learning Excursion - 5
Abbott issues US device correction for some glucose monitors over faulty readings risk
Benihana is 60 years old. Gen Z is lining up.
Pick Your Favored kind of sandwich
Sun storms are powered by a magnetic engine 16 Earths deep, study finds
Two Endangered Bengal Tiger Cubs Die Days Apart at Zoo After Contracting Virus
Lebanon says Israeli strike killed 13 people near Palestinian refugee camp
Catholic influencer shares death of 5-year-old son from 'severe' flu
Eurasian cargo hub expands to capture Europe-Asia freight flows
2023's Best 10 Cell phone Advancements You Can't Miss
Hundreds are quarantined in South Carolina as measles spreads in 2 US outbreaks













