They were supposed to disappear, swept away by regulations, climate laws, and fuel economy constraints. Yet V8s are far from saying their final word. Across the Atlantic, Ram is facing such demand for its HEMI 5.7 engine that it can no longer keep up with the pace. A commercial reality that contrasts sharply with the European Union’s technocratic trajectory.
While Europe buries itself deeper into its all-electric strategy, sometimes at the expense of ground realities, American manufacturers are reassessing their priorities. At Ram, the relative failure of the electric pickup pushed the brand to reconsider its approach. Result: a thunderous return to traditional mechanics with lightning success within the first 24 hours of sales.
This success brings a fundamental question back to the table: should we blindly follow the electric path, or listen to market needs (and desires)? The HEMI V8 case illustrates a striking cultural and industrial contrast that speaks volumes about the growing gap between European policies and American usage.

Europe Locks Down ICE Engines, Even Amid Rising Opposition
The European strategy regarding electrification seems set in stone. Despite pressure from certain member states and flexibility introduced in the 2035 roadmap, the ban on sales of new ICE cars remains a central objective. In the background: ambitious climate goals, the desire to decarbonize road transport, and a form of regulatory obsession with zero emissions.
But this technocratic and inflexible policy increasingly contradicts the diversity of uses and expectations. Criticism is mounting: limited range of affordable electric models, uneven charging network, rising cost of new vehicles. Yet the EU maintains its course, even if it means widening the gap with other major automotive powers.
Because while Europe accelerates, the United States is slowing down, changing course, and sometimes making complete U-turns. The most telling example right now: the explosive return of the HEMI V8 at Ram, symbol of a market where mechanical passion still trumps regulatory logic.

Ram 1500 HEMI: A Return to Tradition That’s Crushing It
Faced with the commercial setback of the electric Ram, the American manufacturer changed direction. Literally. The new CEO decided to listen to market expectations rather than force a shift to a powertrain customers don’t want. Result: the Ram 1500 once again receives the V8 HEMI 5.7 engine, a legendary block in the United States.
The gamble is paying off. As soon as the V8’s return was announced, more than 10,000 orders were recorded in 24 hours. A striking performance, considering Ram sold just over 51,000 pickups for the entire second quarter. The reception is such that current production can no longer meet demand.
This unexpected comeback of a naturally aspirated engine, running counter to European trends, shows that American automotive culture maintains a visceral attachment to certain mechanical configurations. It’s not a question of raw power or efficiency: it’s a matter of character, sound, and tradition.

Factory Overwhelmed: A Stock Shortage… Because of a V8
What was supposed to be a symbolic relaunch has become a logistics problem. Ram can no longer produce enough HEMI V8 blocks to equip its pickups. The brand’s boss admitted they would ideally need more than 100,000 additional engines to satisfy current demand. Ironic at a time when many European manufacturers struggle to sell their electric models.
This naturally aspirated V8 develops 400 hp and 410 lb-ft of torque, respectable figures but below the Hurricane 3.0 twin-turbo block (426 hp and 460 lb-ft) offered on six-cylinder versions. Yet the latter sell half as much. Unlike Europe, rational arguments aren’t enough to convince: cylinder count and displacement retain symbolic power in the United States.
Ram therefore faces a logistics paradox: the oldest engine, the least efficient on paper, is also the most successful. The company must now adjust its supply chain to demand it hadn’t anticipated.

Why Americans Still Prefer a Less Powerful V8
American customers’ choice may seem irrational in terms of performance. The six-cylinder Hurricane, with its twin turbos, offers superior power and torque, as well as better towing capacity (up to 11,610 lbs). Yet it’s the V8 versions that are selling like hotcakes.
The reason lies elsewhere. It stems from a form of mechanical fetishism, an attachment to an engine architecture synonymous with raw power, even if the numbers say otherwise. The HEMI V8 embodies a culture – that of the muscle car, the roaring pickup, the American road trip with an eight-cylinder soundtrack.
So it’s not a rejection of modern technology, but an identity statement. Electric or downsized engines may appeal in metropolitan areas, but outside major cities, American buyers want sound, displacement, and an engine that breathes. A vision of the automobile that Europe, with its regulations, is erasing – but which, across the Atlantic, continues to make hearts race.
