Currently reading: Vauxhall ramping up progress towards 2028 electrification goal
As British firm targets upmarket EV segment, Vauxhall boss expects "strong interest" in electric models to come

Vauxhall is making rapid progress towards its major goal of becoming an EV-only company by 2028, according to managing director James Taylor, whose imminent aims are to boost battery model take-up and raise Vauxhall’s position in the market – close to but distinct from Peugeot, its Stellantis stablemate. 

“Astra going electric is a big milestone for both our popular family car as well as for the Vauxhall brand,” he said. “Our move to electrification is already bringing new customers, so we expect strong interest in both the hatchback and estate models when they arrive in the UK. 

“Our Mokka Electric already represents just over one in four Mokka registrations, and both it and the Corsa Electric are in the top two of their respective segments.”

Vauxhall corsa e front three quarter

The opportunity to ‘tune’ Vauxhall’s positioning in the mainstream market comes as a direct result of joining the Stellantis conglomerate, according to group design director Mark Adams, a Brit with responsibility for both Vauxhall and Opel cars.

“We want to ensure there’s a correct bandwidth between our various marques,” Adams said. “We see Vauxhall-Opel, like Peugeot, as being in the upper part of the mainstream segment. We believe the two marques can be quite distinct, and appeal to different buyers, because of their priorities and histories. Vauxhall-Opel is uniquely a German-British brand, with a quite different appeal from Peugeot, which clearly has strong French roots. 

“We believe the two sit well at the ‘quality and personality’ end of mainstream – and our research is already showing that the Corsa, Mokka and Astra are being perceived that way.” 

Taylor cites his other priority as being to build Vauxhall’s already thriving light commercial market. 

“All three of our van models have been available with electric power since last year,” Taylor said. “Our aim is to be selling only electric vans – seven years ahead of the government’s deadline.”

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Q&A with Vauxhall designer director Mark Adams

Mark adams 1

Has joining Stellantis brought about a repositioning of the Vauxhall brand? 

“Definitely. No doubt about it. We believe we can be a step above the pure mainstream brands, not abandoning our volume customer base but offering them a particular kind of personality and quality. We’re already on that path.” 

The Corsa is being updated. What are the priorities for that? 

“Clearly, the big one is to adopt our new front face, much as you see it on the Mokka and the Astra. When Opel was joining PSA, and later Stellantis, we’d already frozen the Corsa design. Don’t get me wrong: we’re proud of what we’ve done with it, and there’s plenty of life in it. And the market has backed us. “But the new corporate nose makes the car look very new and different. We’ve progressed the interior, too. The whole idea is to ‘detox’ it – to make it simpler.”

Vauxhall corsa facelift front

Vauxhall is doing well with hatchbacks, but an era of ‘skateboard’ chassis is coming. Can the hatchback saloon survive?

“There will be changes. But that doesn’t mean everything will need to be tall. It depends where the technology takes us. Cars will be generally taller. Batteries will be carried underneath. But aero will be important, too, and lower cars have an advantage there.” 

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Electrification is bringing flexibility to mechanical layouts. How much will mainstream cars change? 

“Depends how far you want to push. The opportunities are great: a wheel at each corner, shorter overhangs, more flexibility around the apertures, even changes to where you put the occupants. Up to now, that big lump in the nose has controlled almost everything. We’re looking beyond 2028 right now, and the opportunities are great. But it’s still a matter of designing cars people like.”

How far ahead do you look? 

“For us, a 10-year horizon is about right, and the sheer breadth of future opportunities put a lot of strain on your engineering and your opportunity to invest. You can’t make big decisions too far out because the pace of change might catch you out.” 

Vauxhall grandland gse front three quarter

Hot hatches have been crucial over past decades, both for image building and selling cars. How will they fare in future? 

“They’ll be around, but they’ll change. Our GS-e line will appear soon to show our view. Cars like them will have strong performance, but it won’t be explosive. The opportunities to use huge power are in decline. But driving enjoyment must and will survive. We’ll concentrate on driving enjoyment, responsiveness, agility – stuff like that.”

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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Bimfan 3 December 2022

It's true the Vauxhall design director will not have much say over the drivetrain and model lineup of the company, but it is certainly possible to give a brand a different feel and character.

Probably the best example are VW and Seat or Skoda. Same mechanicals and chassis options, but different feeling cars to drive and look at. 

For me, the main problem with Vauxhall has always been the dealers, who don't seem to be able to see past the end of their noses. Maybe i have just been unlucky when I have visited them, but it has put me off going back.

rmcondo 2 December 2022

A story about Vauxhall is one about Opel, which is one about Stellantis, given that all Opels and Vauxhalls are versions of other Stellantis models. Vauxhall has no independent plans. The guy being interviewed is unlikley to be a key decision maker.

Not a criticism, just a fact.