Mate Rimac can’t assist however be distracted. Automobiles are flying across the nook behind me as they activate to the hill climb on the racetrack in entrance of Goodwood Home. The deafening roars and the rapt crowd are testomony to the ability and lure of the interior combustion engine.
Rimac shouldn’t be, on the face of it, not like lots of the younger individuals watching this occasion, the Competition of Velocity. Twenty years in the past he had posters of the quickest machines on his bed room wall. But now, on the age of solely 34, he’s in the midst of the automotive {industry}’s effort to ditch petrol and transfer to batteries.
At £2m a pop, Rimac Group’s electrical Nevera hypercar is among the most unique road-legal playthings the ultra-rich should buy. He additionally controls Bugatti, probably the most well-known marques within the hypercar world, after a dizzying twenty years that has seen a childhood refugee from Bosnia rise to close the highest of the automotive {industry}.
Rimac has been making waves for a number of years as a maker of eyecatching electrical sports activities vehicles and a supplier of battery tech to long-established names comparable to Aston Martin, Jaguar and Cupra, a part of the Volkswagen group. His place was cemented final July when VW handed him majority management of Bugatti, the maker of one of many world’s quickest vehicles, the Chiron. In June, SoftBank and Goldman Sachs led a $500m funding in his eponymous firm, valuing it at $2bn.
He’s even beginning to get some celebrity-style recognition. He’s changing into a family identify in Croatia: when French president Emmanuel Macron visited the nation final yr, Rimac confirmed him a Nevera. Some automotive followers at Goodwood even cease for selfies whereas he’s ready within the dusty subject of
CV
Age 34
Household Married to Katarina.
Training VERN College of Utilized Science in Zagreb, 2007-10 (dropped out).
Pay “I used to be by no means the best paid particular person within the firm … When forming Bugatti Rimac, I wished to work free of charge. However the shareholders insisted on me having a wage … Relating to my private wealth, that’s tied to the worth of my possession within the firm and to not my compensation.”
Final vacation Honeymoon street journey in a Ferrari 812 GTS from Croatia to Italy in September 2021. “We’ve identified one another for 18 years, however this was our first journey out of Croatia that was not for enterprise.”
Finest recommendation he’s been given “I can’t consider one … I really feel like everyone must stroll their very own path. There aren’t any shortcuts.”
Phrase he overuses “Sure. I have to say no extra usually..”
How he relaxes “There’s not a lot time to chill out. I feel that I’ll be full-on throttle … after which, sooner or later, go fully off the throttle. I don’t suppose that there’s something in between.”
supercars for his flip to experience in a Bugatti (a Veyron this time) on the monitor. It’s an terrible good distance from a boy in his bed room taking a look at automotive posters.
“Work or life earlier than the corporate is sort of a faint reminiscence,” he says. “Like I dreamed about it.”
That life began in Bosnia in 1988. He beloved vehicles from an early age, to the bafflement of his dad and mom. When the struggle in Bosnia began they moved to Germany, the center of Europe’s automotive {industry}. His father was in building and his mom labored as a cleaner after they lived in Germany. After 10 years they moved again nearer dwelling, to next-door neighbour Croatia.
“I wasn’t an awesome scholar,” Rimac says, with what looks as if real modesty. However a trainer mentioned he ought to enter an electronics competitors. He gained that, then a number of extra, and got here up with two patents when he was simply 17. At 18 he purchased a 1984 BMW 3 Collection to go racing. It was “rusty, a bit of crap”, and after two races its combustion engine blew up. So he determined to do one thing that had not been critically pursued by even the biggest carmakers: make a automotive powered by electrical energy slightly than fossil fuels.
At first, jokes about washing machines adopted him across the tracks as he raced with a motor from a forklift truck, some heavy lead-acid batteries, and a inexperienced paint job. The jokes pale when he began successful races with home made electricals able to matching a Ferrari’s acceleration.
Rimac just about taught himself, dropping out of college to pursue the dream in a pal’s storage. He then had a stroke of luck when a consultant of a member of the royal household of Abu Dhabi – Rimac declines to call him – requested him to construct an electrical hypercar.
They one way or the other managed to get one collectively in time for the 2011 Frankfurt motor present, and Rimac began to construct a popularity within the burgeoning electrical automotive {industry}, consulting for more and more large names and successful regularly larger investments. Porsche (which is owned by VW) invested in 2017.
Now Rimac has 1,600 staff. He admits it’s head-spinning for somebody so younger – he first grew a beard to look older, he jokes. Does he ever doubt himself? “Yeah, on a regular basis,” he says. “I feel the possibilities for fulfillment had been on a regular basis very near zero. So to come back to right here, to this stage, the percentages at any cut-off date, I imply …” He pauses. “The percentages are growing, I assume.”
Rising to the helm of a century-old identify comparable to Bugatti is greater than most individuals can dream of for a complete profession, however Rimac has plans for the subsequent revolution within the {industry} he loves – one thing far deeper than electrification. He believes autonomous vehicles will break the century-old hyperlink between driving and possession.
If households abandon automotive possession en masse, that will imply considerably fewer gross sales. Maybe it’s as a result of he’s a millennial with out ties to the previous {industry}, however Rimac doesn’t suppose that may essentially be a nasty factor.
“For 95% plus of the time, we’re simply sitting round losing area, parking,” he says. The “a whole bunch of kilos of aluminium, copper, metal” not getting used is “so inefficient”: “That is so essentially flawed.”
Rimac had a number of provides of funding to “go after Tesla” and construct mass-market electrical vehicles, however he says that will have been like beginning a VHS firm when DVDs had been on the best way. He has determined to go down the robo-taxi route as a substitute.
He gained’t element his plans for Rimac Group’s self-driving taxi subsidiary, Mission 3. The clues he drops, together with state help bulletins from the EU, counsel it will likely be an autonomous automotive service that’s built-in with public transport.

He attracts an analogy with Apple’s early, pre-iPhone, tech partnership with Motorola: it failed as a result of “to make a extremely good product”, you want to management every thing, he says. “And once I say management every thing, I imply not simply the automotive, however the {hardware}, software program, but additionally the remainder of the ecosystem of the autonomous driving, which isn’t simply the automotive, it’s additionally plenty of stuff outdoors the automotive.”
If automotive possession switches from people to fleets of on-demand autos, mid-market producers comparable to Fiat, Renault or Citroën may discover themselves became suppliers to tech-industry titans slightly than coveted manufacturers, Rimac warns. Chinese language firm Foxconn makes some huge cash manufacturing iPhones, however Apple makes extra.
Rimac will proceed to make the type of hypercars he idolised when he was younger, and to supply electrical know-how to high-end carmakers, however he thinks “the large transformation” of autonomous driving will probably be powerful for right now’s greatest carmakers. “Who will cry after a Toyota Camry?” he asks. “I don’t thoughts these vehicles disappearing.”