Great Wall's R1 is a long-range EV for the masses

    At full charge, the R1 has a claimed range of over 300km; priced from Rs 6.15 lakh in China.

    Published On Feb 06, 2020 10:56:00 AM

    46,512 Views

    Great Wall's R1 is a long-range EV for the masses

    China's Great Wall Motor – making its India debut at Auto Expo 2020 – has made quite a statement with a slew of Haval SUVs at its stand. But it’s not just the SUVs that are attracting attention – another interesting car on display at Great Wall Motor’s Expo stand is the ORA R1 EV.

    Internationally, the R1 is sold as part of Great Wall’s ‘ORA’ EV sub-brand (which stands for Open, Reliable and Alternative). The R1 electric car is based on the company’s ME pure-electric platform. It follows the Honda e’s neo-retro city car template, and gets a 33kWh lithium-ion battery pack and a 33kW electric motor. The R1’s range on a full charge is pegged at over 300km (NEDC cycle). 

    What will be a major draw for the R1 is its affordability. In China, prices for the R1 start as low as CNY 59,800 (Rs 6.15 lakh). It remains to be seen how Great Wall Motor proposes to make the R1 as affordable in the Indian market; though the Chinese carmaker has already announced it will take over General Motors' plant in Talegaon for its India operations.

    Great Wall Motor has confirmed that it will launch the Haval brand in our market in 2021, followed by their sub-brand for electric cars – GWM EV. The Chinese carmaker has also made an investment of USD 1 billion (approx Rs 7,123 crore) in its India project.

    What do you think of the R1 EV? Let us know in the comments.

    Copyright (c) Autocar India. All rights reserved.

    Comments

    ×
    img

    No comments yet. Be the first to comment.

    Ask Autocar Anything about Car and Bike Buying and Maintenance Advices
    Need an expert opinion on your car and bike related queries?
    Ask Now

    Search By Car Price

    Poll of the month

    The Mahindra XUV 300 facelift will be called the XUV 3XO. Should more brands rename models for facelifts?

    Yes, it could give new life to a slow-selling car

     

    13.87%

    Yes, but only if there are significant changes

     

    31.84%

    No, it's confusing and dilutes the brand name

     

    29.93%

    No difference, the product speaks for itself

     

    24.36%

    Total Votes : 1363
    Sign up for our newsletter

    Get all the latest updates from the automobile universe