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Citroen Picasso 2010 less thirsty

  • By Paul Gover
  • Herald Sun
  • image

    The efficiency push on the 2010 Citroen Picasso comes because of European taxes on CO2 outputs, with the critical limit at 160 grams/kilometre.

An efficiency push from Europe has just led to a new Citroen Picasso in Australia.

The latest version of the trendy seven-seater comes with claims of benchmark fuel economy and emissions, although there is an extra $1000 on the bottom line.  The 2010 version of the C4 Picasso is fitted with an 100 kiloWatt turbodiesel engine and six-speed EGS transmission with fuel economy of 5.0 litres/100km and CO2 emissions of just 153 grams/kilometre.

The price rise takes it to $45,990, although this still compares relatively well to a starting price of $39,390 for the Kia Grand Carnival, $44,950 for the Mitsubishi Grandis and $50,990 for the Toyota Tarago.

"When we launched the Citroen C4 Picasso we said that it is truly the family car for the 21st century,"” says Miles Williams, general manager of Citroen in Australia.  With the 2010 version, this position is reconfirmed, thanks to its enhanced emissions and fuel consumption reduction."

The Picasso arrived in Australia with a choice of petrol and diesel engines, but petrol power disappeared more than 18 months ago after poor sales.  Stocks of the seven-seater have been low since October last year, the time of the 2010 model change in France, but are now getting back to normal.

Williams says the efficiency push comes because of European taxes on CO2 outputs, with the critical limit at 160 grams/kilometre. In the UK alone, 60 per cent of Picassos are used as company cars and its 153 CO2 figure gives an advantage in both road and company car taxes.  The 2010 Picasso has a five-star Euro NCAP safety rating including ESP stability control and anti-skid brakes.

Comments on this story

Displaying 3 of 4 comments

  • I have a completely different experience. I have one from the very first shipment. Now four years old, while there have been hiccups, all have been sorted at no cost and were often picked up by the dealership not me. The service is so great we are considering buying the C3 as our second car. So easy to use the 3rd row seats, 3 full size seats in the middle row for our 3 boys and fuel economy amazing unlike the Territory we had previously. It is quirky but I am very happy with this car.

    Alice Hudson of Roseville Posted on 15 April 2011 7:50pm
  • Fantastic "review" by Gordon Crane! Loved every word! We were very interested in the Citroen, ....but not any more! As they say, one negative review in more potent than 10 positive ones....but one well written negative review can never be topped!

    Family of Five! of Sydney Posted on 20 February 2011 12:53pm
  • I am about to buy the Picasso . It advertised at $39,990 drive away in the 2 litre disel automatic, but , when i get there it has a reduced price for $46,999 drive away . would anyone tell me why

    yan young of artarmon Posted on 06 October 2010 3:10pm
  • What can I say other than don't touch the Picasso or anything supported by Citroen Aust. It is a great car to drive & very practical. But so unreliable and supported by possibly the most incompetent support in the industry. Mine is 18 months old - bought as ex-demo. In that time it has had problems with the indicators, reverse sensors, reverse mirrors, nasty scraping noise in dash from a loose wiring harness, door handle, blocked fuel filter struck it in limp mode for 300kms when driving home from holidays. But they are the minor ones! Coolant leaked all through the front passenger floor from a faulty pipe. Trailer electronic relay is shot after towing a trailer 3 times - not covered by warranty & will cost ~$600 to replace. Drivers seat collapsed - the foam was faulty. They replaced the seat - very uncomfortable. Turns out Citroen supplied a left hand drive seat base for a right hand drive car! Brilliant. Have been waiting several months for this to be resolved. Meanwhile you get a dead left leg after driving > 1-2 hours. Electronic shutdown. The vehicle just locks down periodically with the hand brake jammed on so you can't move. If you disconnect the battery wait 5 mins, reconnect the battery, wait 5 mins, it will go again. It has done it while driving but most when trying to start off. The guys say it has more error reports than any vehicle they have ever seen. Citroen sent a new program. But they have no idea why it would do it. In 18 months this vehicle has been off the road for 3-4 weeks having its problems sorted. I picked it up yesterday - still with the crap seat, no towing capacity & the reversing mirror again dysfunctional. This vehicle should be taken back & refunded or replaced. There should be a limit that any purchaser should legally have to endure with a product, before the manufacturer is compelled to replace it or refund the cost. Before I bought it a friend said "Isn't Citroen the French word for lemon?" Why did I not listen? So please listen to me as Citroen will not listen to you.

    Gordon Crane Posted on 23 September 2010 10:23am
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