The new fully electric version of Vauxhall's small Combo Life MPV is due in showrooms this autumn with up to seven seats and a range of 174 miles.
Priced from £31,160 after grant, the Combo-E Life arrives alongside closely related vans from PSA Group siblings Citroën and Peugeot, and shares its CMP electric architecture with the Vauxhall Corsa-e and Peugeot e-208.
Like those cars, it uses a front-mounted electric motor producing 134bhp and 192lb ft for a 0-60mph time of 11.2sec and a governed top speed of 80mph, which, Vauxhall says, makes it suitable "for both city use and longer motorway journeys".
The Combo-e's 50kWh battery offers a WLTP-certified range of 174 miles and is compatible with 100kW rapid charging so can be charged from empty to 80% capacity in 30 minutes. It is mounted under the floor to ensure the electric Combo offers the same load capacity as its combustion-engined counterpart.
The MPV is equipped with a 7.4kW single-phase on-board charger as standard but can be optionally upgraded with an 11kW three-phase device for faster domestic charging.
The passenger-carrying variant is available in five-seat standard form or with seven seats in long-wheelbase form. In commercial guise, the Combo-e has a 3800 litres cargo bay, while the larger 4.75m-long variant bumps that capacity up to 4400 litres. Both are rated to carry loads of up to 800kg and to tow up to 750kg. The longer van is also available in four-seat, crew-cab guise.
Otherwise, the Combo-e is familiar from the petrol and diesel variants that have been on sale since 2018. All Combo-e models will be equipped with smartphone compatibility as standard, with optional extras including a larger, 8.0in touchscreen and a raft of advanced driver aids.
The Combo-e Life is Vauxhall's second electric van-based MPV, following the larger Vivaro-e Life. An electric version of the firm's large Movano van is due later this year, but will not gain a Life version.
Prices have yet to be confirmed, but taking the Vivaro-e as an example, the electric Combo Life can be expected to command a slight premium over its conventionally fuelled sibling, likely amounting to a start price of around £25,000 after the government's plug-in car grant.
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Pity they haven't given it a Vizor nose, instead of that clunky old-style job.
I would've been interested in an electric Combo Life but with the Corsa-e struggling to achieve its claimed range, the 171 range of a van with the same running gear is going to be even less likely, especially with seven people on board and driving down a motorway in winter.
And it'll probably cost a ridiculous amount of money too - might as well buy a nearly new petrol one for 12 grand and have around 25 grand left over to invest in something that'll count as reducing your carbon footprint.
It's a shame they didn't take the opportunity give the front end the new 'Vizor' treatment that Vauxhall are rolling out on new models, would be a good way to introduce the new EV version.