Jeep, Americaās iconic 4x4 SUV and pick-up maker, has shifted to the fast lane in its drive towards a zero emissions future, with no turbo-diesel or V8 engine offered in the latest version of its Grand Cherokee flagship.Ā
Asked about the brandās decision to bring the new, seven-seat Grand Cherokee L to Australia without the option of the 5.7-litre Hemi V8 offered in the USA, or turbo-diesel power, Stellantis Australia and NZ managing director Kevin Flynn told CarsGuide: āClearly the route forward is first PHEV, and then itās full electrification. And I think that journeyās going to be pretty quick.ā
The mention of PHEV refers to the Jeep Grand Cherokee 4xe (four-by-e) due for local launch in the second half of 2022, and Mr Flynn cited the cost of homologating multiple engines for Australiaās relatively small market as a secondary, more short-term consideration.
āItās a case of how much investment goes into giving a range of engines, and what is the necessity for that range of engines,ā he said.
Diesel has been a long-standing option in Jeep models like the Compass and Grand Cherokee, yet the fifth-generation version of the brandās flagship SUV doesnāt offer diesel power.
According to Mr Flynn: āWhere companies are with their development and investment in diesel will determine how long theyāre going to carry on with it. But the bottom line is weāre coming to the end of diesel. We see that in so many markets already, across the world.
āAustralia isnāt the biggest car market,ā he said. āAnd I think what will happen in Australia will not necessarily be to meet the immediate demands and desires of Australians, because itās going to be, well, whatās available?Ā
āIf you look at the US and Europe, thatās whatās going to drive a lot of what products are now developed.
āI will lose volume because we havenāt got a diesel, but I donāt think thatās going to have an impact on us and what weāre going to achieve with this car.ā
Maximum braked towing capacity in the Grand Cherokee has dropped from 3.5 tonnes in the outgoing fourth-generation model, to 2.8 tonnes in the 3.6-litre naturally aspirated V6 petrol-powered fifth-gen version (2.3 tonnes in the top-spec Summit Reserve).
Stellantis senior vice president, India and Asia Pacific region, sales, marketing, and regional operations, Billy Hayes confirmed the Jeep brandās rapidly evolving powertrain strategy, telling CarsGuide: āThe new power is going to be EV. We are moving towards doing the right thing for the planet. Itās what consumers increasingly want, itās what governments support. We have a responsibility.Ā
āStellantis is now the worldās fourth largest automaker. A company exists to deliver shareholder value and take care of customers, but we have a duty to the planet at the same time. Thatās the larger mission, thatās the larger purpose for Stellantis,ā he said.