Baby Range Rover on the horizon
Baby Range Rover on the horizon
March 2009
Land Rover is planning to produce a new small Range Rover after confirmation the UK Government will offer a grant of up to £27 million to help make it happen.
Land Rover is due to make a final decision on the the go-ahead of the project at its award-winning plant at Halewood, on the Merseyside in the UK later this year.
The car would be based on Land Rover's acclaimed LRX Concept vehicle, first shown at the Detroit Motor Show last year, and would be the smallest, lightest and most efficient it has ever produced.
"We welcome the Government's support for this project, which would form a key part of our future product plans and which we very much want to put into production," said Phil Popham, Managing Director of Land Rover.
The grant offer will be
made available under the Government's Grant for Business
Investment scheme and is an important contribution towards
the overall £400 million cost of the project. This is
separate from the broader automotive support package
currently being unveiled by the British
Government.
Although it still has to go through a number
of approval gateways in the product development process
before getting the final go-ahead, Land Rover has also
confirmed that the new car would be a key addition to the
Range Rover family of luxury vehicles.
Phil Popham said, "Our engineering feasibility study has shown that we can very successfully deliver Range Rover levels of quality, drivability and breadth of performance in a more compact, more sustainable, package. Feedback from the most extensive customer research we have ever undertaken also fully supports our belief that a production version of the LRX Concept would further raise the desirability of our brand and absolutely meets all those expectations."
"It would be the smallest, lightest and most efficient Range Rover that we've ever built," said Mr Popham. "The compact size, lighter weight and sustainability-focused technologies of the LRX Concept showed how Land Rover is planning to respond to the needs of a changing world. Despite the current economic challenges, we remain committed to investing for the future, to continue to deliver relevant vehicles for our customers, with the outstanding breadth of capability for which we are world-renowned."
The new Range Rover would embrace excellent levels of refinement and all-round capability and also introduce new powertrain options, providing a major step forward in enabling the implementation of Land Rover's e-terrain technologies strategy and achievement of its goal to exceed a 20 per cent improvement in CO2 emissions.
"Both the design and size of the LRX Concept have generated a hugely positive reaction wherever it has been seen and we've also gathered fresh insights on what potential owners would look for in a production equivalent. That knowledge is now being applied to the process of refining the vehicle as it heads towards final approval," said Mr Popham.
The Halewood facility employs 2000 people and is a recipient of the JD Power Gold Standard. It currently produces the Land Rover Freelander 2 and Jaguar X-TYPE.
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