Currently reading: Paris motor show 2010: report + pics
Steve Cropley's full verdict on the Paris motor show, plus pics of every show star

This was, everyone agreed, one of the most spectacular openings to a European car show for many a long day.

Not only was it packed with headline grabbers like the new jet-powered Jaguar C-X75, and some expected executive mainstreamers like the new VW Passat, but with a whole suite of practical, good-looking hybrids and electric vehicles – such as Renault's showroom-ready Zoe – to underscore the fact that a seismic shift to electric traction really is about to happen.

Above all, everyone noted the remarkable change of mood from the previous Paris salon, two years ago, when recessionary fears were running so high – as one grizzled industry veteran put it – that the only thing most car industry bosses cared about was the overnight bank rate.

This year's event could not be more of a contrast: the recession might not exactly be over yet, but the fundamentally forward-looking automotive industry has long since decided to do what it always does in a crisis: build better cars and find a way to sell them to sufficient customers.

There was lots of gear-changing going on. Jaguar's designers – who by popular vote unveiled the show's most stunning concept car – reckoned their new mid-engined CX75 hybrid (which won't make production but bristles with design cues to forthcoming sports cars) was their first chance for years to take a proper look into the future. The new grille, design boss Ian Callum told us, wasn't far from a production car.

The array of new Lotus concepts – three sports cars, a coupé, a saloon and a city car – was unprecedented at any previous motor show, and simply swet up more burning questions for new boss Dany Bahar and his managers: could this extraordinary plan to raise volume and prices at the same extraordinary rate ever prosper?

The question will be years in the answering, but most agreed that even if these things had never been achieved before, they deserved a chance this time.

Manufacturers everywhere were getting serious about weight-saving, not just the likes of Lamborghini, whose spectacular 6.0-litre carbon concept, Sesto Elemento (named in Italian after carbon, the sixth element in the periodical table) scaled in at less than 1000 kilograms, an amazingly low figure for such a car.

Meanwhile the new Peugeot 508, the soul of a repmobile, is roomier and better equipped than its predecessor, the 407, but manages to slash more than 60 kilograms from its kerb weight.

What else? Too much to count, actually. Renault's new battery-powered Zoe looked terrific ("I'd drive it," I overheard at least one hot-hatch devotee say) and there must have been a lot of relief in the room, given that Renault – which made quite a fuss about its four electric prototypes a year or two ago – has been beaten to the production car punch by Nissan's excellent Leaf.

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On the mainstream side, BMW's glassy new 6-series coupé (one of those concepts, like the long-awaited Vauxhall Astra GTC three-door, which everyone knows is the real thing) looked as all-round desirable as the competently humdrum new VW Passat did not.

Peugeot's stand was packed with goodies, from a new range of bicycles – the company is to start selling pedal-power again in the UK – to the impressive new scissor-door HR1 high-wheeler concept, 3.6-metres long, which featured the company's new and highly significant 1.2 litre, three-cylinder, direct-injection petrol turbo engine, making a healthy 110bhp, which linked to Peugeot's neat Hybrid4 electrified back axle, made a 150bhp car that could deliver 80mpg with 80g/km of CO2.

Cars like these are the future, everyone agreed, and from Paris's rambling expo near the Porte de Versailles yesterday, the future looked exceptionally bright.

 

Steve Cropley

Steve Cropley Autocar
Title: Editor-in-chief

Steve Cropley is the oldest of Autocar’s editorial team, or the most experienced if you want to be polite about it. He joined over 30 years ago, and has driven many cars and interviewed many people in half a century in the business. 

Cropley, who regards himself as the magazine’s “long stop”, has seen many changes since Autocar was a print-only affair, but claims that in such a fast moving environment he has little appetite for looking back. 

He has been surprised and delighted by the generous reception afforded the My Week In Cars podcast he makes with long suffering colleague Matt Prior, and calls it the most enjoyable part of his working week.

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fhp11 4 October 2010

Re: Paris motor show report + pics

Is it me or are the links to some of the pictures broken??

michael knight 1 October 2010

Re: Paris motor show report + pics

Steve, no mention of the Evoque? Looked great to me, even if the interior detailing wasn't quite in the Q5 territory that LR seems keen to push it into.

beemerboy 1 October 2010

Re: Paris motor show report + pics

Is the new M sport 5 being launched in Paris??