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Kia Tasman PHEV: Calls for rival BYD Shark to accelerate due to customer demand

Go to Australia says customers and fleet operators who are interested Tasman utes are already asking about plug-in hybrid propulsion (PHEV), which could prioritize the introduction of this propulsion technology during the model’s life cycle.

In conversation with Daily SparkzGeneral manager of products at Kia Australia, Roland Rivero, said initial feedback from customers and fleets also included requests for a competitor such as the BYD Shark 6 and the Ford Ranger PHEV.

“I think you know very well that there are competitors who are having some success with plug-in hybrid (utes),” Mr. Rivero said. “Naturally and organically, some fleets (and) customers are actually demanding further development of this type of powertrain.

“It’s a long game, particularly on a commercial vehicle, working with R&D, working with head office. We intend to achieve a long product life cycle with Tasman, and a generation after that and beyond – watch this space.”

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Although there is no official confirmation as to what forms of electrification the Tasman will ultimately offer, Mr Rivero has previously revealed this Daily Sparkz that Kia’s global parent company is “definitely” looking into hybrid and electric drives.

“So what’s on the agenda to be studied and reviewed is definitely hybrid and (full) electrification. When is still very open,” Mr Rivero said in May, adding that the Tasman’s ladder frame chassis was a “fairly modular platform” that can “support numerous powertrains”.

However, Australia currently only gets a Euro 5-compliant version (i.e. without AdBlue) of the carmaker’s 154kW/440Nm 2.2-litre four-cylinder turbodiesel, matched to 4×2 and 4×4 powertrains. An eight-speed automatic transmission is standard.

The 2.5-litre four-cylinder turbo petrol engine offered in the Korean market has been excluded from Australia due to pressure from the Australian government’s New Vehicle Efficiency Standard (NVES), which will financially penalize automakers from July 1, 2025 if they fail to meet average emissions caps.

However, the turbo petrol engine available abroad could be implemented in a future hybrid powertrain.