All new 2025 Range Rover Velar reinvented as EV in JLR’s reworked masterplan

All new 2025 Range Rover Velar reinvented as EV in JLR’s reworked masterplan

Slow-selling Range Rover Velar will gain a radical all-new electric reboot by 2025


T he Range Rover Velar will be reinvented as a slick, luxurious electric SUV, targeting the upcoming Porsche Macan EV with vastly improved endurance, performance and practicality. It will be the first of several new electric Land Rover models to run down the firm’s revamped production line in Halewood, Merseyside, followed soon after by EV successors to the Range Rover Evoque and Land Rover Discovery Sport (see overleaf). Work to convert the factory into an EV production facility will get under way next year and the electric Velar is expected to enter production before 2025.

It has now been confirmed that the Velar, Evoque and Disco Sport successors will be electric only

Until recently, the future for the Velar had been unclear. Launched in 2017 as a Macan rival, the luxury crossover initially sold strongly but was deprioritised as JLR shifted focus to the more profitable Range Rover and Defender when the semiconductor crisis hit in 2021. In the 12 months to March 2023, it was the second-slowest- selling Land Rover, ahead of the Discovery, with 29,845 units sold.

While the cheaper and more popular Discovery Sport and Evoque were confirmed to go electric more than two years ago, the firm had given no indication that the Velar would return for a second outing until a wide-reaching company update in March revealed at least three new EVs will be built at Halewood, one of which will be the second-generation Velar. Today’s Velar is closelyrelated to the Jaguar F-Pace and is built alongside that car in Solihull. As well as being produced at a new location, its successor will swap from the familiar D7 architecture onto a completely new platform called EMA. First announced in 2021, this new skateboard platform – conceived to accommodate the smaller Land Rover models – was originally set to be capable of hosting hybrid powertrains in addition to pure-electric systems, but it has now been confirmed the Velar, Evoque and Discovery Sport successors will be electric only. Details of its technical makeup and capabilities are closely guarded, but the EMA is likely to be a more overtly ‘roadfocused’ proposition than the MLA structure that will underpin electric derivatives of the full-sized Range Rover and Discovery. JLR has revealed the EMA will be a ‘simple’ structure engineered around its floor-mounted batteries, which will be equipped with 800V hardware for rapid charging – so the electric Velar could match the 350kW maximum top-up speed of its upcoming Porsche and Audi contemporaries.

JLR also said earlier that the EMA’s bespoke electric motors will offer an efficiency of around 4-4.5 miles per kWh and be the “most torque dense” in class. This means the Velar and its similarly sized range-mates should ape the long-distance touring potential of their ICE forebears and be likely to improve on their low-speed off-road abilities. The platform entered a late-stage engineering approval process nearly a year ago and test mules for the Velar EV are expected to hit public roads and test tracks in the coming months.

The reinvention of the Velar will be a pivotal moment in the evolution of the Range Rover brand. As part of JLR’s ground-up rethink, it will split its product lines into four core families – Jaguar, Defender, Discovery and Range Rover – in a bid to emphasise their different positioning and cultivate a stronger sense of relationship between toprung flagships and entry-level models.

To that end, the electric Velar will no doubt take obvious styling and technical inspiration from its full-sized namesake but, like the current car, will be much smaller and more accessible in terms of price. Its badge will demand that the Velar delivers what vehicle programme director Nick Collins referred to recently as “true Range Rover values”, as embodied by the current flagship. These include “off-road ability, usability and refinement” packaged together in an “uncompromised” approach. In the meantime, the Velar’s appeal will be bolstered by the introduction of a heavily revised version of today’s car, due in dealers in the coming weeks with a longer-range and faster-charging PHEV, external styling tweaks and an overhauled interior.

Current Velar has been revised; in dealers very soon. DNA from full-sized Range Rover will be present in Velar EV

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