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Renault’s coolest electric vehicles are blocked by Australian safety regulations

Renaults Failed European electric vehicles (EVs) remain forbidden fruit for Australia as they do not meet the same strict safety regulations that have applied to various other brands in recent years.

Although some electrical renewal has been initiated with the introduction of the Scenic E-Tech, Renault Australia is still unable to launch the brand’s smaller electric vehicles – most notably the Renault 5 E-Tech hatch – as they do not currently comply with an Australian Design Rule (ADR) regarding rear seat child restraint anchorages.

In particular, the Renault 5 (and probably also the Renault 4 E-Tech and the newer Twingo E-Tech) does not comply with ADR 34/03 (anchorages for child restraint systems), which requires a top tether anchor point in every rear seat equipped with a seat belt.

This was confirmed to the media at the Scenic’s local launch, with Renault Australia General Manager Glen Sealey stating: “The problem with the Renault 5 is ADR compliance. It’s the rear seat child restraint system.”

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It is far from the first time that a manufacturer has had to contend with ADR 34/03, which came into force on November 1, 2019 for all newly launched vehicles and from November 1, 2022 for all vehicles for sale.

Lastthe Deepal E07 “Multitruck” was recalled due to the lack of a center seat anchor, while BYD was forced to halt deliveries of its Atto 3 EV in 2022 for the same reason. Honda also launched its second-generation HR-V small SUV here as a four-seater, rather than developing a solution specifically designed for Australia.

In addition, Tesla launched its updated Model 3 sedan here despite it being non-compliant, and while the company later paused sales to fix the problem, Mr Sealey said the compliance costs for the Renault 5 would be prohibitive for the French brand to follow suit.

“Renault tends to do things right and pretty well and so compliance is taken very seriously,” he said.

Renault 4 E-Tech
Renault Twingo E-Tech