By any measure, this is one of the most dramatic drivetrain reversals in Porsche’s modern history. Just months after shuttering production of the fourth-generation 718 Boxster and Cayman—and confidently lining up bespoke electric replacements—Porsche is now preparing to reengineer that very EV platform to accept petrol power once again. In Stuttgart, the future just did a clean heel-and-toe downshift.
According to senior sources inside Porsche’s Weissach engineering center, the company is working to adapt the upcoming PPE Sport architecture—originally conceived as an EV-only platform for the next Boxster and Cayman—to accommodate a mid-mounted internal-combustion engine. The move comes as global EV demand cools and Porsche recalibrates a strategy that, until recently, pointed decisively toward an electric-only sports-car future.
This isn’t a minor tweak or a half-step hybrid hedge. It’s a full-on engineering U-turn, motivated by production efficiency, economies of scale, and—perhaps most importantly—customer appetite. Porsche has already acknowledged the shifting landscape with a costly £6.65 billion write-down tied to its EV ambitions. Now, the 718’s return to gasoline power marks the clearest signal yet that Zuffenhausen is listening closely to the market.
Two 718 Futures, One Platform
To understand what’s happening, it’s important to separate Porsche’s short-term stopgaps from its longer-term plan. The company previously confirmed it would continue building “top” versions of the outgoing 718—widely expected to be RS and GT4 RS variants—even as the electric Boxster and Cayman arrive in 2026. Those cars will effectively sit above the EVs in the lineup, keeping combustion alive for hardcore enthusiasts.
But the newly revealed petrol-powered 718s are something else entirely. These will be fifth-generation models, built on the same PPE Sport platform as their electric siblings, and expected to arrive toward the end of the decade. In other words, Porsche isn’t just extending the life of the current cars—it’s attempting to unify electric and combustion sports cars on a single next-generation architecture.
That’s an extraordinarily ambitious goal, and one that presents serious technical hurdles.
The EV Problem: Structure, Structure, Structure
The PPE Sport platform was never designed to host an engine. Like most modern EV architectures, it relies on a stressed, load-bearing battery pack integrated into a flat floor. That battery doesn’t just store energy—it provides a significant portion of the car’s structural rigidity and enables an ultra-low center of gravity.
Remove it, and the entire bodyshell loses strength.
Porsche engineers’ solution, as described to Autocar, involves developing a new structural floor section that bolts into the platform’s existing hard points, effectively restoring rigidity where the battery would have been. From there, a redesigned rear bulkhead and subframe would support the engine and transmission.
Even then, packaging remains a nightmare. The PPE Sport platform has no central tunnel, no provision for a fuel tank, no routing for fuel lines, and nowhere to run an exhaust system. Engineers suggest the rear of the car may need to be completely reworked—an acknowledgment that this platform is being pushed well beyond its original intent.
Still, Porsche insists that this effort is non-negotiable. For the petrol 718s to make sense, they must achieve dynamic parity with the EV versions. That’s a tall order when the electric cars benefit from that low-mounted battery mass, but insiders say anything less would undermine the brand’s sports-car credibility.
Euro 7 Changes the Math
For years, Porsche believed the naturally aspirated 4.0-liter flat-six was living on borrowed time. Early drafts of the EU’s Euro 7 emissions regulations threatened to bury engines like it under oversized particulate filters and complex after-treatment systems, making them impractical for low-volume sports cars.
That calculation has now changed.
The final Euro 7 rules are less severe than initially proposed, and the EU’s post-2035 exemption for e-fuels has reopened the business case for new petrol-powered performance cars. As one senior Porsche engineer put it bluntly, “The electric Boxster and Cayman risked becoming a niche. Euro 7 changed the arithmetic.”
In other words, the regulatory headwinds eased just enough for Porsche to reconsider what it does best.
Flat-Six Revival?
Exactly which engine will power the reborn petrol 718s hasn’t been finalized, but the leading candidate is familiar—and beloved. Internal plans presented by outgoing CEO Oliver Blume point toward a further evolution of the 4.0-liter naturally aspirated flat-six introduced to the 718 lineup in 2020.
In its most aggressive current form, as fitted to the GT4 RS, that engine makes up to 493 horsepower. Whether future versions match that output—or tune it differently to coexist with electric siblings—remains to be seen. But the message is clear: Porsche isn’t ready to let the flat-six go quietly.
What This Really Means
Beyond the technical intrigue, Porsche’s 718 reversal says something larger about the industry’s trajectory. Like Fiat resurrecting the 500 Hybrid or Mercedes-Benz rethinking its EV-first commercial vehicles, Porsche is acknowledging that the road to electrification isn’t a straight line.
For enthusiasts, it’s a rare bit of good news in an era of uncertainty. The Boxster and Cayman—long celebrated for their balance, tactility, and mechanical intimacy—may yet continue to offer the visceral experience that defined them, even as electric versions push performance in new directions.
If Porsche pulls this off, it won’t just have saved the 718’s soul. It will have created one of the most flexible—and philosophically complex—sports-car platforms the company has ever built.
Source: Autocar