North Taranaki Midweek

Aussie-built electric ute on the cards

- NILE BIJOUX

High-volume Australian-built vehicles may soon be back on the menu thanks to a new startup aiming to introduce a new electric ute to the market.

Roev (pronounced ‘‘rove’’) wants its finished product on the market by about 2026, having worked on the ute for the past three years.

A design sketch of the ute shows a sleek single-cab design with a cab-chassis tray over the back with a bulging bonnet, LED headlights and slim glasshouse. It will likely feature Roev’s in-house electrical­s, which it already uses to convert Ford Rangers and Toyota Hiluxes.

At the moment, those use a single electric motor powering both 4x2 and 4x4 variants, with either a 70kWh or 100kWh (lithium-iron phosphate) battery pack available. The larger will offer up to 300km of range, something Roev believes will be suitable for many fleets. Four-wheel drive vehicles will retain their standard transfer case while the transmissi­on will be a simple reduction gear.

The electrical system will initially be 400 volts – the standard used in most EVs – and will support DC fastchargi­ng capability. Roev will pull its batteries from overseas suppliers at first, before eventually using Australian­made batteries.

It will also support bidirectio­nal charging, helped by

Roev’s history in software.

‘‘EV utes are a great start, but the biggest impact will come from running them efficientl­y with renewable energy and the ability to store and redistribu­te that energy from their batteries,’’ chief executive Noah Wasmer, a former executive with software giant Atlassian told carsales.

‘‘We see the future of vehicle depots as DC micro-grids, and by testing our V2G technology and EV management software, we can show that it can be done without impacting the driving performanc­e or range requiremen­ts for electric vehicles.’’

According to the publicatio­n, Roev isn’t currently interested in producing hundreds of thousands of vehicles just yet. Instead, it wants to build ‘‘micro-factories’’ that operate profitably on as few as 10,000 vehicles annually.

‘‘If you told me we had such amazing success that we need to build millions of vehicles I’ll tell you that we’re not architecte­d right to build millions of vehicles,’’ said Wasmer.

Roev isn’t ready to talk pricing or availabili­ty just yet, aside from that 2026 goal. There’s also a good chance the specificat­ions will change by the time Roev is ready for production.

 ?? ?? A sketch of Roev’s electric ute.
Left: Roev wants to convert Hiluxes and Rangers while it readies its own ute.
A sketch of Roev’s electric ute. Left: Roev wants to convert Hiluxes and Rangers while it readies its own ute.

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