Opel and Vauxhall Motors EV-Only In Europe By 2028

Opel and Vauxhall Motors are determined to only produce electric vehicles by 2028. Both companies have reaffirmed that they will only use EVs in Europe in 2028 as quoted from CarsCoops.

To bridge their consumers into the era of electrification, Oppel and Vauxhall will offer electrified versions of every model they make by 2024.

Opel and Vauxhall Motors already have several environmentally friendly vehicles such as the Astra plug-in hybrid, Grandland plug-in hybrid, Corsa-e, Mokka-e, Rocks-e, and various electric vans.

See also: Toyota targets zero-emissions cars in Europe by 2035

Their electric vehicle portfolio is growing as the company confirms the successor to the Crossland and Insignia will be electric.

Opel hasn’t said much about the upcoming electric vehicles, but they will offer the best fast charging capability of 19.9 miles (32 km) per minute. Ope estimates their vehicle’s range to be between 311 and 497 miles (500 and 800 km).

See also: Introducing Solterra SUV, first electric vehicle from Subaru

Speaking of batteries, Stellantis, Mercedes and Total/Saft have joined forces for the Automotive Cells Company, which is slated to develop and manufacture high-performance electric vehicle batteries.

Production is scheduled for 2025 and the Kaiserslautern giga plant will have an industrial capacity of up to 32 GWh.

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