
Long-range PHEVs like Volvo XC 70 are trending
The XC70 sits between XC60 and XC90 and uses a new range-extender platform.
The new model was previewed last week as a mid-sized PHEV. It has a claimed electric range of almost 200km, far more than any PHEV the brand sells at present.
XC70 uses a platform supplied by owner Geely, and is initially for China only. However, Volvo said it is considering a global launch for the medium SUV. In regions where charging options aren't so comprehensive, a long-range hybrid makes sense.
Read our review of the Volvo EX30 Twin-Motor Performance here.
Most XC70 running will be done with electricity. So it is a long-range plug-in hybrid, Samuelsson says. An electric car with a back-up engine when the battery is flat, which will not happen often.
'It's a pragmatic bridge solution to wait for our customers to really feel comfortable with an all-electric car.'
Technical details remain sparse, but Volvo has promised an electric range of up to 200km, more than double what the XC60 PHEV can achieve.
XC70 is barely larger than the XC60 and resembles a shrunken XC90. However, it uses different architecture.
The Scalable Modular Architecture (SMA) is said to underpin the vehicle with no details available. Volvo XC70 taillights recognisably Volvo in shape.
While fellow Geely brands use combustion engines as a generator to top up a traction battery, Volvo's XC70 is a more conventional PHEV. It follows the recent unveiling of Volkswagen's ID Era REx concept at the Shanghai motor show.
That like-sized car was engineered in partnership with SAIC to target the growing demand for REx cars in China. It too may go global, with particular relevance in Europe and North America.
The XC70 will be key to Volvo which is on a global cost-cutting drive in what it sees as a challenging environment. With 200km of EV range, charging should be a weekly affair.
That said, Volvo is committed to becoming a fully electric car company, even if just 20 per cent of its sales in the first quarter of 2025 were electric. Premium plug-in hybrids are seen as ideal for customers not yet ready to switch to a fully electric vehicle.
The XC70 name hasn't been heard of since 2016, when it was applied to an off-road version of the V70 estate.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Scoop
08-07-2025
- Scoop
Maasai Demand Volkswagen Pull Out Of Carbon Offset Scheme On Their Lands
Maasai Indigenous people in Tanzania have called on Volkswagen (VW) to withdraw from a controversial carbon credits scheme which violates their rights and threatens to wreck their livelihoods. In a statement, the Maasai International Solidarity Alliance (MISA) denounced the 'loss of control or use' of vital Maasai grazing grounds, and accused VW of making 'false and misleading claims' about Maasai participation in decision making about the project. Many Maasai pastoralists have already been evicted from large parts of their grazing lands for national parks and game reserves, with highly lucrative tourist businesses operating in them. Now a major new carbon-credit generating project by Volkswagen ClimatePartner (VWCP) and US-based carbon offset company Soils for the Future Tanzania is taking control of large parts of their remaining lands, and threatening livelihoods by upending long-standing Maasai grazing practices. The Maasai have not given their free, prior and informed consent for the project. They fear it will restrict their access to crucial refuge areas in times of drought, and threaten their food security. Ngisha Sinyok, a Maasai community member from Eluai village, which is struggling to withdraw from the project, told Survival: 'Our livestock is going to be depleted. We will end up not having a single cow.' Asked about VW's involvement in the project, he replied, 'It is not a solution to climate change. It is just a business for people to make money using our environment. It has nothing to do with climate change.' Another Maasai man, who wished to remain anonymous for fear of reprisals, said: 'They use their money to control us.' A third said: 'Maasailand never had a price tag. In Maasailand, there is no privatization. Our land is communal.' Survival International's Director of Research and Advocacy, Fiona Watson, said today: 'The carbon project that Volkswagen supports violates the Maasai's rights and will be disastrous for their lives, all so the company can carry on polluting and greenwash its image. It takes away the Maasai's control over their own lands and relies on the false and colonial assumption that they are destroying their lands — which is not supported by evidence. 'The Maasai have been grazing cattle on the plains of East Africa since time immemorial. They know the land and how to manage it better than carbon project developers seeking to make millions from their lands.' VW's investment in the project, whose official name is the 'Longido and Monduli Rangelands Carbon Project', is believed to run to several million dollars, and has contributed to corruption and tensions in northern Tanzania, according to MISA's report on the project. An adjacent project in southern Kenya, also run by Soils for the Future, is beset with similar problems, and has already sparked resistance from local communities. Survival International's Blood Carbon report revealed that the whole basis for these 'soil carbon' projects is flawed, and unsupported by evidence. Survival documented similar problems with the highly controversial Northern Kenya Grasslands Carbon Project. That project suffered a blow in a Kenyan court and was suspended and put under review by Verra, the carbon credit verification agency, for an unprecedented second time. Notes: Further undermining VW's 'green' credentials, there are serious concerns that the company might source nickel for their electric vehicle batteries from the territory of uncontacted Indigenous Hongana Manyawa people in Halmahera, Indonesia. VW sources batteries from CATL, a joint venture partner in a new battery factory inaugurated last month just a few miles from the territory of the uncontacted Hongana Manyawa. VW has also signed MOUs with Eramet and Tsingshan, which, together with the Indonesian state mining company, own the biggest nickel mine in the world. That mining operation is currently destroying the uncontacted Hongana Manyawa's territory. Volkswagen ClimatePartner (VWCP) is a joint venture between the auto maker and ClimatePartner, a controversial German company which provides carbon offsetting services to polluting businesses. The 1 million hectare (2.5 million acre) project depends on undermining the Maasai's traditional and long-standing grazing practices, requiring them to change to 'Rapid Rotational Grazing', which removes flexibility and causes hardship – particularly in dry seasons.


Scoop
24-06-2025
- Scoop
Indonesia: Presidential Visit For New EV Battery Factory Is 'a Disaster For Uncontacted Indigenous People'
This week's expected announcement that Indonesia plans a new $6-7bn EV battery factory on Halmahera Island spells disaster for the island's uncontacted Indigenous people, experts warned today. President Prabowo Subianto is reportedly planning to travel to Halmahera this week to inaugurate construction. The government calls the planned facility, 'the world's first upstream-downstream car battery ecosystem' — meaning the entire process from mining and refining nickel to battery manufacturing will happen on Halmahera. But the project is a catastrophe for the estimated 500 uncontacted Hongana Manyawa people. Their ancestral forests are already being destroyed by nickel mining. The planned expansion will almost certainly lead to the complete destruction of their rainforest — and of them. CATL, the world's largest EV battery maker, is set to be a joint venture partner in the new battery factory. It supplies Volkswagen, Tesla, Ford, Stellantis, BMW, and Mercedes-Benz, among others. The news comes just two weeks after the Indonesian president cancelled four nickel concessions on the neighboring islands of Raja Ampat over concerns that mining would harm its thriving tourist industry. Survival International Director Caroline Pearce said today: 'This announcement is a death sentence for the uncontacted Hongana Manyawa. Nickel mining concessions already cover 40% of their territory. Their home – the land that is theirs under international law – is being brazenly seized and destroyed to cater to global industries and global consumption.' Halmahera – the only home of uncontacted Hongana Manyawa people – is already the site of the world's biggest nickel mine, which has razed vast areas of the island's rainforest. The mine's operator, French company Eramet, has known of the severe risks to the 500 uncontacted Indigenous people for more than 10 years, but continues to deny their presence. 'These plans are turbo-charging the destruction of their rainforest home,' Pearce added. 'Going ahead means devastating the Hongana Manyawa's homes, livelihood, food, shelter, medicines and their very identity – and it will kill Hongana Manyawa families. They have lived on and cared for this island and its forests for countless generations - and now they are being destroyed in the name of a supposedly sustainable way to combat climate change.' The most likely site for the new battery factory in Halmahera is less than 12 miles away from where two uncontacted Hongana Manyawa men were filmed in 2023 aiming arrows against bulldozers on their territory. 'The Indonesian government has shown it's prepared to cancel nickel mining to save tourism; it must now also do so to stop an appalling human rights atrocity,' Pearce said. 'By acting now and establishing a no-go zone for mining on the territory of the uncontacted Hongana Manyawa people, the government can prevent their annihilation.' Notes: Almost half of the uncontacted Hongana Manyawa's territory already overlaps with mining concessions. (See p24 of Survival's 'Driven to the Edge' report) Tesla says it is exploring 'the need for the establishment of a no-go zone for mining to protect indigenous and human rights, particularly those of uncontacted communities', in Indonesia. Leaked documents from Weda Bay Nickel (Eramet's mine), obtained by Survival, reveal the company knows its own mining activities could 'affect the existence' of the Hongana Manyawa but it dismisses this as 'hypothetical' and 'unimportant'. (For citation or more information, contact Survival.)


NZ Autocar
24-06-2025
- NZ Autocar
GTI Edition 50 celebrates a half century of hot Golfs
A half century after the arrival of the Mk1 Golf GTI, Volkswagen has revealed the hot new Mk8.5 Volkswagen Golf GTI Edition 50. This is essentially the successor to the Clubsport S. This new Edition 50 is about as hardcore as a Golf GTI gets. At almost 240kW from the EA888 turbocharged 2.0-litre petrol it also stumps up with 420Nm. By comparison, the standard GTI makes 195kW and 370Nm. Golf GTI Edition 50 is said to hit 100km/h from standstill in 5.5 seconds, right up there with Civic Type R. Top speed is limited to 269km/h. It's hardly a stripped out three-door lightweight special like its forebear either. This retains the practical five-door body and rear seats, along with a fully-loaded cabin and seven-speed dual-clutch transmission. Power goes to the front wheels only, the grounding of it assisted by an electronically controlled limited slip differential. Read our test of the Current Golf GTI. When fitted with the optional GTI Performance Pack, the Edition 50 gets all-new suspension kinematics. There's more negative camber, 20 per cent stiffer springs, retuned adaptive dampers, stiffer rear wheel hub connections and firmer bushes. The DCC (dynamic chassis control) and VDM (vehicle dynamic management) are tweaked to suit the new set-up. So too is the steering. It also rides 15mm lower on forged 19-inch alloy wheels that, together with Bridgestone Potenza Race semislick tyres, reduce unsprung weight by 8kg. An Akrapovic titanium exhaust system subtracts another 11kg off the total weight compared with the GTI Clubsport. 'It is also the most capable on the track,' said chassis development boss Lars Frömmig. So VW is clearly wanting to rival the best in class for driver engagement. And it is already the fastest of any production VW around the Nurburgring, posting a time of 7min and 46.13 sec. Styling changes are relatively restrained. There are two heritage colour options not available on standard Golf GTIs, Moss Green and Tornado Red. Meanwhile, the forged wheels are finished in red and black and the front and rear lights have smoked inners. And there's a unique stripe on the sill but the look is the opposite of outrageous. Inside is a special tartan fabric trim along with microsuede inserts, plus red seatbelts and Edition 50 badges. But the seats themselves are standard GTI pews. The twin-screen layout is standard fit, and comes with customisation options. VW has not yet said how many it intends to build or what the price premium over the GTI will be. However, we do know that the first RHD deliveries are due early in 2026.