The Weekly Advertiser Horsham

Kia to introduce two EV utes

- – Matt Brogan

Kia has indicated it will launch two electric utes as part of a range of new zero-emissions models by 2027.

The line-up will comprise as many as 14 battery-electric vehicles, BEVS.

Kia said one of the utes would be designed specifical­ly for emerging markets, while the other was earmarked for mature markets, such as Australia, where it would compete with rivals such as the Chevrolet Silverado EV, Ford F-150 Lightning, Ram 1500 EV, Rivian R1T and Tesla Cybertruck.

Kia has yet to reveal full details of its utility BEVS, but confirmed the load-carrying variants would be in showrooms by as early as 2026.

The light commercial utilities form part of a range of electric cars that Kia plans to launch by 2027 and will arrive alongside a further 17 BEVS from sister company Hyundai.

Hyundai Motor Company president and chief executive Jaehoon Chang said his company would continue to advance both its hardware and software technologi­es.

“Hyundai is successful­ly accelerati­ng its transition to electrific­ation and becoming a global leader in EVS despite a challengin­g business environmen­t caused by the industry-wide chip shortage and ongoing pandemic,” he said.

“Along with our seamless efforts to improve EV value, HMC will continue to secure its business sustainabi­lity as a mobility solutions provider through advanced technologi­es of not only hardware, but also software.”

Mr Chang unveiled sales and financial performanc­e targets that he said were expected to be achieved by the end of the decade, including annual global BEV sales of 1.87 million units, or a seven percent global share by 2030.

Hyundai also presented its mid to long-term financial goals earmarking $105.6 billion of investment for future business by 2030, including $21.4 billion for electrific­ation and $13.3 billion for software capabiliti­es.

The Korean giant said that by the end of the decade, it hoped to achieve an operating profit margin of 10 percent or higher in EV businesses by enhancing competitiv­eness in hardware and software capabiliti­es and an expanded vehicle line-up.

That line-up will include 11 electric models from Hyundai – including three sedan models, six SUVS, one light commercial vehicle, as well as ‘one new-type model’ – and six from Genesis, including two passenger cars and four SUVS.

Hyundai also said it would diversify battery sourcing with the aim of securing 170GWH of batteries for its models by 2030, and introduce an Integrated Modular Architectu­re, IMA, – an evolution of the electric global modular platform, E-GMP, that underpins the Ioniq 5 and GV60.

The IMA was being developed to standardis­e a battery system and up to five motor types, which will be used in a wide range of BEVS and the exclusive purpose-built vehicle platform.

The Korean firm was also developing new software architectu­res capable of applying over-the-air updates to new models from the end of 2022 and a ‘level three’ autonomous driving technology dubbed Highway Driving Pilot, which would be applied to the Genesis G90 later this year.

Electric future

For Kia, the future looks equally electric.

The firm is targeting annual vehicle sales of four million units globally in 2030, including 1.2 million BEVS.

It will reportedly introduce up to 14 new BEVS by 2027 and offer more than two million eco-friendly models for annual global sale by the year 2030.

Like Hyundai, Kia will also offer advanced autonomous driving capabiliti­es dubbed Automode by 2023.

The technology will debut in the brand’s EV9 and roll out elsewhere in following years.

Kia president and chief executive Ho Sung Song said Kia had been undergoing a full-scale transforma­tion which included changes in corporate vision, logo, product and design and strategy.

“To achieve the company’s vision of becoming a sustainabl­e mobility solutions provider, we will focus on accelerati­ng the transition to future business models,” he said.

“We will become increasing­ly customer-centric in our approach and pursue a dynamic transforma­tion while maintainin­g sound business operations.”

Mr Sung Song said the company aimed to expand the proportion of eco-friendly cars within its portfolio from 17 percent in 2022 to 52 percent in 2030.

Kia planned to launch at least two new BEVS each year from 2023 and build a full line-up of 14 BEVS by 2027.

Furthermor­e, the company was planning to establish a battery supplyand-demand

strategy and constantly upgrade its battery technology.

It forecasted that battery demand would increase significan­tly from 13GWH in 2022 to 119GWH in 2030 on the back of increased EV sales.

Kia’s mid to long-term financial goals show that by 2026, the company aims to reach a total $132.3-billion in gross revenue with $11.1-billion in operating profit and an operating profit margin of 8.3 percent.

Kia aims to increase its market capitalisa­tion to $110.2-billion by 2026 – a threefold increase compared with the end of 2021.

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 ?? ?? Kia’s concept Mojave, above, and Safari Sedona, left, are included in a range of new zeroemissi­ons models to be relased by the company by 2027.
Kia’s concept Mojave, above, and Safari Sedona, left, are included in a range of new zeroemissi­ons models to be relased by the company by 2027.
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