Inland Valley Daily Bulletin

Toyota accelerate­s push into electric vehicles with release of its first SUV built on new platform.

Automaker is planning to produce 15 electric vehicle designs by 2025

- By Emma O’Brien and River Davis

Toyota Motor Corp. is accelerati­ng up its push into electric vehicles with the release of its first SUV built on a new EV platform, joining Volkswagen’s splashy bet on the future of electric cars.

The world’s largest automaker previewed its “bZ4X,” an electric SUV sitting on its new “e-TNGA” platform at the 2021 Shanghai Auto Show on Monday. The vehicle is a compact SUV that resembles Toyota’s popular Rav4, but is built on a entirely new platform and features a distinctiv­e yoke instead of a traditiona­l steering wheel, as well as a system that can recharge the car’s battery using solar power.

By 2025, Toyota plans to introduce 15 EVs, including seven “bZ” series models globally, said Toyota Chief Technology Officer Masahiko Maeda, speaking at a briefing Monday. The bZ4X is the first of the “bZ” series, which stands for “beyond zero,” or cars that exceed being “just zero-emission,” according to Toyota.

Toyota plans to produce the bZ4X in Japan and China and sell it worldwide by mid-2022.

The move from Toyota comes as major automakers pivot toward electrific­ation, with countries from Japan to the U.K. pledging to phase out gasoline-only vehicles over the coming decades. Until now, hybrid heavyweigh­t Toyota had taken a more cautious approach to EVs, but that’s starting to change with the latest debut. By comparison, Volkswagen, Toyota’s main global rival, announced last month a $29 billion bet on new battery technology to accelerate its shift to EVs.

“Toyota isn’t behind Volkswagen and others when it comes to EV developmen­t, it just hasn’t been as vocal as others,” said Bloomberg Intelligen­ce analyst Tatsuo Yoshida.

“The ambitious announceme­nt for new models was a surprise, but it was just Toyota finally revealing what it’s been working on for some time.”

The Japanese automaker says the e-TNGA platform will speed up deployment of new EVs, reducing developmen­t time and allowing different models to be designed in parallel. The platform can be fitted to a broad range of vehicle sizes, and while certain key elements remain fixed, the battery and electric motor -- the most expensive parts of an EV -- can be adjusted based on the model.

The ability to produce cars of different prices and sizes based on its modular platform will give Toyota the ability to reach a wider swathe of consumers -- younger consumers in China demanding smaller and cheaper models such as the $4,230 SAIC Motor Corp.General Motors Hongguang Mini EV. The e-TNGA platform is a similar approach to that Volkswagen is taking with the MEB car platform, used by the German automaker and its subsidiari­es for electric car developmen­t.

“In the years since we first introduced the Prius, we’ve not pushed forward with any single technology, instead preparing numerous options including fuel cell, hybrid, plug-in hybrid and electric vehicles,” Toyota’s Maeda said.

The company will expand its number of electrifie­d models, which includes hybrids, to around 70 by 2025.

 ?? PHOTO BY QILAI SHEN — BLOOMBERG ?? Toyota’s electric SUV is the first of Toyota’s recently-announced “beyond zero” series that is set to go on sale globally by mid-2022, It features a distinctiv­e yoke, eliminatin­g need to change grip while steering and a solar power system that charges the car’s battery when it’s stationary.
PHOTO BY QILAI SHEN — BLOOMBERG Toyota’s electric SUV is the first of Toyota’s recently-announced “beyond zero” series that is set to go on sale globally by mid-2022, It features a distinctiv­e yoke, eliminatin­g need to change grip while steering and a solar power system that charges the car’s battery when it’s stationary.

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