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Mazda looks at all-electric MX-30

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Mazda Australia appears to be leaning toward importing the all-electric MX-30 small SUV, promising a decision by mid-year following extended deliberati­ons over the matter.

Compared with Mazda Australia managing director Vinesh Bhindi’s non-committal position on the MX30 in November last year, Goauto observed a more enthusiast­ic tone toward the EV during last week’s launch of the similar-sized but petrolpowe­red CX-30 in Victoria.

This apparent sentiment shift coincides with a report from Australia’s Electric Vehicle Council that sales of EVS jumped 203 percent in 2019 while sales of combustion engine vehicles slumped 7.8 percent, and the announceme­nt by British prime minister Boris Johnson that the sale of combustion engine vehicles – including hybrids – would be banned in the UK by 2035.

Mazda Australia marketing director Alastair Doak told Goauto he saw the MX-30 as providing an opportunit­y ‘to be part of the electrific­ation conversati­on’, drawing parallels with the brand’s early adoption of diesel engines in passenger cars during the mid-late 2000s.

“We’re looking at MX-30 not for a volume opportunit­y but to be part of the electrific­ation conversati­on and the opportunit­y to train some of our dealers,” he said.

“If you remember way back, we went into diesels very early when you could only have a manual diesel and we had all these questions about why we were doing diesels.”

The first oil-burning Mazda6 midsizer debuted in 2006 and was joined the following year by a diesel-powered Mazda3 small car.

“Again, it was all preparatio­n and getting used to it, training within the dealer network and getting comfortabl­e with it,” Mr Doak said.

“Ultimately we sold a lot of diesels with everything we did in the following generation.”

Mazda has drawn criticism for not being serious about electric vehicles, given the MX-30’S relatively small 35.5kwh battery pack and resultant 200km range – less than half that of the similar-sized Hyundai Kona Electric – along with its polarising rear-hinged ‘suicide’ door design that echoes the RX-8 coupe that sold between 2003 and 2012.

However, Mr Doak strongly refuted these criticisms, saying Mazda Australia

‘absolutely believes in electric, hybrid and all those things’.

Mazda has also claimed that EVS, even with small lightweigh­t batteries such as that of the MX-30, have similar lifecycle CO2 emissions to a diesel hatchback, a sentiment echoed by Mr Bhindi last November.

“There are always some customers who are interested, but in our case, when we talk to them about the wellto-wheel position that we have, an EV is not the complete answer in its current entire stage – from where energy is generated, how it’s generated, right to the end – it does not make sense if that’s their interest to reduce emissions, for example, or be environmen­tally friendly,” he said at the time.

Mr Doak reiterated Mazda’s ‘building block’ drivetrain strategy of improving the efficiency of internal combustion engines and adding increasing levels of hybridisat­ion before making the switch to electric-only propulsion.

He added the joint venture establishe­d in 2017 to develop electric vehicles with Toyota and component supplier Denso was ‘bubbling in the background as well’.

“We have full plans to be there,” he said.

“As we sit here today the market for electric vehicles in Australia is still incredibly small, particular­ly at a price-point below $60,000.”

Addressing journalist­s in a Q&A session at last week’s CX-30 launch, Mr Doak joked that even if the business case for the MX-30 failed to stack up, Mazda Australia would ‘sneak one in just to have a play’.

“We’re talking with our colleagues at Mazda Corporatio­n to see what we can do,” he said.

“We would like to have it but are not going to be silly; it has to make sense.”

 ??  ?? DIESEL PRECEDENT: Mazda Australia draws parallels between its early foray and success with diesel engines with potential introducti­on of the MX-30 electric small SUV.
DIESEL PRECEDENT: Mazda Australia draws parallels between its early foray and success with diesel engines with potential introducti­on of the MX-30 electric small SUV.

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