Euro 7 impact on Ferrari Hybrids
Discussion
I think this warrants a new topic away from the HVB SoH discussion.
The Euro 7 HV battery bit is more interesting than people realise, especially for cars like the 296 GTB.
This is not simply “what SoH does the Ferrari BMS show on a diagnostic tool today?” Euro 7 is talking about regulated traction-battery durability: a certified energy/range retention metric over time. In other words, it is closer to **State of Certified Energy** or **State of Certified Range**, not just a manufacturer’s internal battery-health estimate.
For M1 plug-in hybrids, the headline requirement is broadly **80% of certified battery energy retained at 5 years / 100,000 km**, and **72% at 8 years / 160,000 km**. That is different from a service-tool SoH value, because the baseline is the certified/new regulatory value and the measurement/reporting method has to follow the approved procedure.
That matters on a 296 because the HVB is not just a little EV-range battery. It is also part of the performance system: boost, torque fill, eDrive, launch behaviour and regen. So it sees high C-rate charge/discharge events relative to its modest energy capacity.
Euro 7 therefore pushes the pack from being merely a Ferrari-managed performance component to being a regulated durability component. Ferrari has to preserve certified battery energy over a defined age/mileage window, not just make the car feel good when new.
The likely engineering levers are things like:
The car could still hit the same headline figures, but Ferrari may need to protect the HVB more aggressively in edge cases: repeated boost, repeated regen, hot track use, high SOC, low SOC, or an older pack with rising internal resistance.
That is the technical nuance: Euro 7 battery durability is not just today’s Ferrari BMS SoH number. It is a homologation-linked, certified-energy/range retention requirement that could influence how aggressively the 296’s hybrid system is allowed to use its HV battery over the vehicle’s life.
The Euro 7 HV battery bit is more interesting than people realise, especially for cars like the 296 GTB.
This is not simply “what SoH does the Ferrari BMS show on a diagnostic tool today?” Euro 7 is talking about regulated traction-battery durability: a certified energy/range retention metric over time. In other words, it is closer to **State of Certified Energy** or **State of Certified Range**, not just a manufacturer’s internal battery-health estimate.
For M1 plug-in hybrids, the headline requirement is broadly **80% of certified battery energy retained at 5 years / 100,000 km**, and **72% at 8 years / 160,000 km**. That is different from a service-tool SoH value, because the baseline is the certified/new regulatory value and the measurement/reporting method has to follow the approved procedure.
That matters on a 296 because the HVB is not just a little EV-range battery. It is also part of the performance system: boost, torque fill, eDrive, launch behaviour and regen. So it sees high C-rate charge/discharge events relative to its modest energy capacity.
Euro 7 therefore pushes the pack from being merely a Ferrari-managed performance component to being a regulated durability component. Ferrari has to preserve certified battery energy over a defined age/mileage window, not just make the car feel good when new.
The likely engineering levers are things like:
- more hidden top/bottom SOC buffer;
- tighter limits on peak discharge when hot, cold or aged;
- capped regen when the pack is hot or near high SOC;
- more active HVB thermal management;
- revised charge strategy to avoid long periods at stressful SOC;
- BMS ageing models that report a regulation-relevant energy/range SoH;
- possible age/temperature/internal-resistance-based derating.
The car could still hit the same headline figures, but Ferrari may need to protect the HVB more aggressively in edge cases: repeated boost, repeated regen, hot track use, high SOC, low SOC, or an older pack with rising internal resistance.
That is the technical nuance: Euro 7 battery durability is not just today’s Ferrari BMS SoH number. It is a homologation-linked, certified-energy/range retention requirement that could influence how aggressively the 296’s hybrid system is allowed to use its HV battery over the vehicle’s life.
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