Currently reading: Range Rover EV and electric Jaguar XJ delayed by pandemic

Lower-slung Range Rover and Jaguar's battery-powered saloon may still debut in 2020

Jaguar Land Rover bosses have confirmed the existence of an electric Range Rover – and revealed that it and the upcoming electric Jaguar XJ have been delayed by spending cuts during the pandemic.

According to the transcript of a conference call with investors seen by Autocar, JLR’s chief financial officer Adrian Mardell said the two EVs will be revealed in October and November, instead of their planned unveilings in August and September.

The two cars will be based on JLR’s all-new MLA architecture and will be siblings under the skin. Very little is known about the battery-electric Range Rover, but it’s expected to be slightly lower in profile than the Velar, if a similar length. The two cars will be built at the retooled Castle Bromwich plant. Mardell also spoke of a mystery new product described as “MLA MID”, which has also been delayed.

Mardell told investors that engineering work on the next-generation Range Rover and Range Rover Sport models (both MLA-based) wasn’t paused during the lockdown. Work on the Defender 90 also continued unhindered. During the call, one investor representing an international bank questioned Mardell on JLR’s plans to cut investment on future models, with a new figure of £3 billion nearly £1bn lower than in earlier plans.

Jag xj rear 2019 0

Mardell described the £3bn investment as “more the kind of level going forward” and hinted that JLR planners had reduced the number of derivatives of future models to save money. Depending on the state of the global market, more future derivatives could also be culled, according to the transcript.

Mardell also disclosed that JLR’s business was being re-engineered – helped by the switch to a single platform – to thrive on volumes of slightly less than 500,000 units per year.

Before Covid-19 hit, JLR was selling around 550,000 vehicles annually, Mardell said. He also claimed that he could see the company growing sales through 550,000 and on to 600,000 units annually, hinting that JLR would be highly profitable at that level. Describing the new Land Rover Defender as a [sales] “game changer”, with new versions in the pipeline, Mardell said JLR “had ambitions” for annual Defender sales to hit 100,000.

Advertisement

Read our review

Car review

The fourth-generation Range Rover is here to be judged as a luxury car as much as it is a 4x4

Back to top

Mardell’s presentation also revealed that JLR’s warranty costs fell by a massive £107m year on year in the second quarter of this sales year.

READ MORE

2020 Jaguar XJ: latest images reveal electric luxury car's look

Jaguar Land Rover project aims for hydrogen SUVs by 2030

Range Rover EV to be most road-biased Land Rover yet

Join our WhatsApp community and be the first to read about the latest news and reviews wowing the car world. Our community is the best, easiest and most direct place to tap into the minds of Autocar, and if you join you’ll also be treated to unique WhatsApp content. You can leave at any time after joining - check our full privacy policy here.

Join the debate

Comments
16
Add a comment…
theo ab 29 October 2020

Will it happen?

So far there has been nothing public about this (unless I'm living under a rock), and with one day left to realistically launch the LR product before the end of October, they'll either dump it out of the blue, or something has gone wrong. If it is the latter, I hope we aren't seeing the beginning of the end for JLR. It would be terrible for LR to go into 2021 without an EV, and that's besides the issue of likely paying hefty emissions fines by the end of this year. At this point, after hearing about the design of the XJ, and what the LR EV could look like, it would just be nice to see them.

Please prove me wrong. Please.

aktoro 18 September 2020

Jaguar XJ?

Why are auto magazines using Dodge Charger pix for the new Jaguar XJ?

Andrew1 18 September 2020

Slovakia

The pandemic or are they taking a good look at Slovakia?