Volvo EX30 News
Volvo warns Oz car market is unsustainable
Read the article
By Andrew Chesterton · 11 Apr 2025
Volvo warns that "something has got to give" in Australia's new-car market, with too many brands now fighting for too few sales for all to survive.That's the word from Volvo Car Australia Managing Director Stephen Connor, with the senior executive also detailing how his brand will survive the new-marque onslaught."We've got 70-plus OEMs here, and we've probably got another 20 arriving on our shores in the next short period of time. It is crazy," he said."The market is, they reckon, 1.2 million this year. I personally think it's about one million, but let's go with the experts, and they're saying it's 1.2."So 1.2m (sales) with probably 90 OEMs – something has got to give."I think the people who will struggle are the people who are going to be fighting in that volume segment. And I think, good on the new entrants coming in. They're going to bring a new dynamic."Asked whether all 90 brands would still be in Australia in five years time, the executive replied "I don't think so"."I think there will be some consolidation, and this is only my personal view," he said, "I think some brands who have come in, the new ones, have gone, (saying) this is too hard and too difficult."His thoughts echo those of Kia, Toyota and other major players, all of whom suggest the new-car makeup in Australia is going to change, though Volvo is in a unique position, given several of the new players – Polestar, Geely, Zeekr and the soon-to-arrive Lynk & Co – are all part of its extended family .But Volvo says realistic expectations and a business model not contingent on extreme volume will ensure the marque survives in Australia."We're looking for marginal growth this year, which is okay. We've gathered production based on marginal growth," Mr Connor says."I think it's important for us to grow as a brand. But we don't need to grow by 20 per cent. Five per cent, two per cent – that's good enough for us as we go forward. Our production this year is based off about 9,500 units. And we're comfortable to achieve that."A changing product line-up will fuel that marginal increase, Mr Connor says, with some well-known models on the way out, replaced by vehicles the brand hopes will capture more sales."So S60 and V60, we say goodbye this year to those models. They were only about 300 cars a piece. There's a lot of time and energy spent just to sell 300 cars, and as you know, sedans are struggling in this marketplace," he says."We've got the EX90, which will be about 300 cars this year. We've got XC90, the new one. So that will be about 1100 units roughly. We'll get some extra growth from EX30 Cross Country. We have refreshed XC60, a big segment for us. It's normally about 3000 cars. Then later on this year we've got the ES90 as well, which will be small volumes again."But you see, we've consolidated the line-up. So that's where our growth will come from. Refreshed XC90, refreshed XC60. We've got obviously XC40, which is still a great seller for us as well, and then you've got EX30."
2025 Alfa Romeo Junior shock low price
Read the article
By Byron Mathioudakis · 02 Apr 2025
Australia’s premium small SUV hybrid class is about to experience a shake-up with the arrival of the Alfa Romeo Junior.
Australia’s most off-road capable EV SUV?
Read the article
By Samuel Irvine · 11 Feb 2025
Volvo has launched a more rugged Cross Country variant of its electric EX30 SUV.
Rough and tumble new electric car confirmed
Read the article
By Dom Tripolone · 21 Jan 2025
A rough and tumble version of Volvo’s pocket-sized EX30 electric SUV has been confirmed.
Do you agree with JC's Top 5 cars of '24?
Read the article
By James Cleary · 30 Dec 2024
It’s a year that will likely go down as an historical turning point for the Aussie new car market. With local manufacturing now a tiny spec in the rear view mirror, the long-predicted new wave of Chinese challenger brands built into an automotive tsunami in 2024.
The all-new vehicles released in 2024 in Aus
Read the article
By Byron Mathioudakis · 27 Dec 2024
Many so-called “all-new” models aren’t all that new. In fact, a sizeable chunk are reskinned versions of what came before, with fresh sheetmetal over the same general hard points.
How safe is your favourite SUV?
Read the article
By Tom White · 05 Dec 2024
ANCAP has released a raft of new scores for eight new models which have landed in Australia this year, with some notable new entrants falling short of the maximum five-star rating.
Top 5 fixes that were never needed in cars
Read the article
By Laura Berry · 14 Jul 2024
Cars without back windows? Cameras instead of mirrors? Electric cars that sound like petrol ones? Here's our Top 5 things car makers have fixed that weren't broken.
Volvo EX30: Strong seller avoids UK hiccups
Read the article
By James Cleary · 03 Jul 2024
Reports out of the UK overnight have highlighted numerous software gremlins impacting examples of Volvo’s recently released EX30 EV SUV sold there. But Australian customers can rest easy with the local subsidiary telling CarsGuide vehicles delivered here are not affected.According to Autocar serious software issues have caused a range of faults from media screens going black and steering-wheel buttons not responding to cars failing to charge and emergency braking systems randomly activating.Despite Volvo UK’s commitment to rectify the problems “as swiftly as possible” the Autocar report alleges some owners have handed their cars back for refund.But a Volvo Australia spokesperson has confirmed this market’s status as a “deep water” export destination has helped it side-step the electrical problems.The deep water term relates to EX30 production in China taking around three weeks from build to showroom in Australia while delivery to Europe can be closer to nine weeks.And that flexibility has meant local cars had the latest, updated software installed to side-step any problems before customers took delivery.Speaking of which, the city-sized SUV has proved popular straight out of the gate. In its third month on sale the city-sized SUV recorded over 400 registrations for a year-to-date total (end June) in excess of 1000 units.
Volvo tracing battery composition and origin
Read the article
By John Law · 06 Jun 2024
Volvo has developed the first battery passport, a way to trace the materials, composition, recycled content, carbon emissions and origin of its batteries. The game-changing blockchain tracing technology has been in the works for over five years in partnership with UK company Circulor. It is important because Volvo is a step ahead of other manufacturers such as Tesla, BYD and Ford, all of which will need to supply battery passports to sell electric cars in Europe from February 2027. Volvo's EX90 electric large SUV will launch the technology and it will steadily rolled out to all of Volvo’s electric cars including EX30, EX40 and future products. Also under the Geely umbrella is Polestar, the electric-only brand already using blockchain technology to trace its materials. Volvo has set a global date of 2030 to go fully electric while Australia will be ahead of the curve, selling EVs exclusively from 2026. Owners will be able to scan a QR code for a simplified version of the passport. Also included is a battery health assessment function that will be crucial for residual values. Regulators get access to more detailed information from the passport. This includes all aspects that supplier Circulor traces, including battery materials from mines, through refining processes, energy mixes being used by suppliers, shipping, to eventually ending up in a car for a total emissions figure.In addition to keeping track of emissions throughout production, blockchain technology will also shed light on which suppliers are being used and if they’ve committed human rights violations. "Car manufacturing has never been about which rock went into which component and which got connected to which car," Circulor CEO Douglas Johnson-Poensgen told Reuters. "It's taken a long time to figure that out," she added.