Hyundai Motor Co on Thursday launched its first electric sedan, Ioniq 6, which the South Korean automaker is betting will help it grab a bigger share of the electric vehicle (EV) market dominated by Tesla Inc.
The Ioniq 6 is one of more than 31 electric models that
Hyundai Motor Group - including Hyundai Motor, its sister company Kia Corp and
premium brand Genesis - plans to introduce through 2030 to secure a projected
12% of the global EV market.
Hyundai's sedan will expand its EV range beyond its current
crossovers and SUVs to compete head-to-head against Tesla's best-selling Model
3 sedan.
Hyundai and Kia were already the second-biggest EV shippers
globally excluding China in January to May this year, with a combined 13.5%
market share that was second only to Tesla at 22%, according to industry
tracker SNE Research.
The Ioniq 6 will be priced in the range of 55 million won
($41,949.51) to 65 million won for the South Korean market.
"The Ioniq 6 will be able to compete with Tesla in the
volume EV sedan sector, considering its competitive pricing and long driving
range," said Lee Jae-il, an analyst at Eugene Investment & Securities.
The Ioniq 6 could leverage its pricing in the EV sedan
market because Tesla has increased prices several times, he added.
The Hyundai electric sedan will have a driving range of
about 610 kilometres (380 miles), around 30% more than the Ioniq 5 crossover,
Hyundai said.
"We are using the same (battery) cell chemistry but ...
we maximised the amount of batteries per each pack, enhancing energy density
significantly," said Kim Yong Wha, an executive vice president at Hyundai.
It will come in two battery pack options - 53-kilowatt per
hour (kWh) and 77.4 kWh - and will begin production at its Asan plant in South
Korea later this year, Hyundai said.
The Ioniq 6 will be available in South Korea this year and
the U.S. market launch is expected in the first quarter of next year, it added.
Hyundai said the Ioniq 6 launched this year would source
batteries from SK Innovation's SK On and LG Energy Solution's batteries will be
used from next year.
The launch comes after Hyundai announced its plans to build
dedicated EV plants both at home and the United States, where the Ioniq 5 and
Kia's EV 6 SUV together became the second-best selling EVs after Tesla cars and
ahead of Ford Motor Co's Mustang Mach-E.