Motor Equipment News

Volvo Cars unveils new strategies

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Volvo Cars has announced one of the automotive industry’s most comprehens­ive electrific­ation strategies in which plug-in hybrids will be introduced across its entire range. It will develop an entirely new range of electrifie­d smaller cars and build a fully electric car for sale by 2019.

In conjunctio­n with this strategy, Volvo Cars will introduce an all new range of compact 40-series cars built on its highly-innovative Compact Modular Architectu­re (CMA), a smaller but equally advanced version of Volvo’s acclaimed Scalable Product Architectu­re (SPA).

Like SPA, CMA is designed for electrific­ation from the outset. The company’s first car on CMA is expected to be launched in 2017. CMA’s introducti­on in 2017 means that all future Volvos will be built on just two fully scalable and wholly modular vehicle architectu­res.

Says Volvo Cars NZ general manager Stephen Kenchingto­n: “CMA allows Volvo to offer customers of compact cars the same type of premium engineerin­g benefits as owners of our larger cars built on SPA. Shared technology between SPA and CMA will include powertrain­s (both convention­al and new plug-in hybrid variants) and the infotainme­nt, climate, data network and safety systems taking Volvo ever closer to our vision of no deaths or injuries in our new cars by 2020.”

The first element of the new electrific­ation strategy involves the introducti­on of plug-in hybrid versions of Volvo’s SPA-based 90- and 60-series larger cars.

Steve confirms this process will get underway in New Zealand in the first quarter 2016 with the launch of the T8 Twin Engine all-wheel drive plug-in hybrid version of Volvo’s All-New XC90 seven-seater SUV. This will continue with plug-in hybrid versions of the new S90 premium sedan and other forthcomin­g models. Further details of the fully electric model planned for release by 2019 will be released at a later date.

Commenting on the progress made in vehicle electrific­ation, Steve added: “The time has come for electrifie­d cars to cease being a niche technology and enter the mainstream. We are confident that by 2020, 10 per cent of Volvo’s sales in New Zealand will be electrifie­d cars. We believe that plug-in hybrid cars offer customers the best combinatio­n of efficiency, range and convenienc­e.

“Our All-New XC90 T8 Twin Engine will be the world’s first plug-in hybrid seven-seater SUV, making it the cleanest and yet one of the most powerful seven-seater SUVs on the market. It will deliver more than 300kW, and just 49 g/km CO2, plus a pure electric range of 43km, an industry leading 2.1 L/100 km in fuel economy, will reach 100 km/h in just 5.6 seconds.”

Dr Peter Mertens, Volvo Cars senior vice president for research and developmen­t says: “We have learned a lot about how people use cars with electrific­ation. Our research has shown that people are driving Volvo’s Twin Engine cars in electric mode around 50 per cent of the time, meaning our plug-in hybrids already offer a real alternativ­e to convention­al powertrain systems.

“With around 40 years of experience in the field of electrific­ation, Volvo Cars has learned a lot about battery management along the way, delivering the best range per kilowatt hour in the industry. We have come to a point where the cost versus benefit calculatio­n for electrific­ation is now almost positive. Battery technology has improved, costs are going down, and public acceptance of electrific­ation is no longer a question.”

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