Gulf Today

Jaguar to become completely electric

-

LONDON: Jaguar Land Rover’s (JLR) luxury Jaguar brand will be entirely electric by 2025 and the carmaker will launch e-models of its entire lineup by 2030, it said on Tuesday, as it joined a global race to develop zero-emission vehicles.

JLR, owned by India’s Tata Motors, said its Land Rover brand will launch six pure electric models over the next five years, with the first one coming in 2024.

Known for its iconic, high-performanc­e E-type model in the 1960s and 1970s, Jaguar faces the same challenge as many other carmakers - making the transition to electric vehicles while retaining the feeling and power of a luxury combustion engine model.

JLR said it will keep all three of its British plants open as it electrifie­s its range. “It’s time to re-imagine the next chapter for both brands,” Chief Executive Thierry Bollore said.

Shares in Tata Motors rose as much as 3% ater the announceme­nt.

JLR said its electric plans for Jaguar would be centred at its Solihull plant, but dropped plans to build the XJ, the brand’s flagship full-size car, at its Castle Bromwich facility in central England.

Bollore, who took over as CEO in September, said the Castle Bromwich plant would focus instead on “non-production” activities in the long term. He provided few details. JLR said it will spend around 2.5 billion pounds ($3.5 billion) annually on electrific­ation technologi­es and the developmen­t of connected vehicle services.

The company said it was also investing in developing hydrogen fuel cells in anticipati­on of a future shit to hydrogen to power vehicles.

The carmaker will have prototypes using hydrogen fuel cells on Britain’s roads within the next year, it said, as part of a long-range investment plan.

Car groups worldwide are pursuing zeroemissi­on strategies to meet stringent CO2 emission targets in Europe and China.

 ?? File/reuters ?? ↑ Cars at a Jaguar Land Rover dealership in Milton Keynes, UK.
File/reuters ↑ Cars at a Jaguar Land Rover dealership in Milton Keynes, UK.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Bahrain