By Hannah Elliott, Los Angeles
This year, it seems, all anyone ever wanted to talk about in the car world were electric vehicles.
In March, nine EU countries urged the European Commission to accelerate an EU-wide phaseout of gasoline- and diesel-powered vehicles.
In November, U.K. Prime Minister Boris Johnson announced legislation that will require all newly built homes and office buildings in England to include electric vehicle charging capabilities.
As of December 1, more than 15 U.S. states had pledged to phase out sales of new cars with combustion engines; at least two more such moves are pending.
Auto shows such as the one in Munich in September went from being sleepy annual trade conventions to glamorized electric mobility confabs whose stars were electric pods and EV race car concepts.
Wall Street spent billions of dollars on electric startups promising a bright future on EVs they hadn’t even made yet.
Hennessey and Rolls-Royce announced plans for their own supercharged stunners. Bugatti gained a new electric overlord.
Detroit’s traditional automotive giants worked hard – and spent billions – to convince consumers and legislators that they were embracing an all-electric future.
Analysts went so far as to declare the combustion engine “dead.”
Don’t let hype obscure reality.
Even California, which is the biggest market for electric vehicles in the country, reports that only 6% of the cars on its roads are electric. The rest of the U.S. still hovers around 2%.
By 2040, EVs will add up to just 31% of all the cars on American roads, according to BloombergNEF.
We have a long way to go before EVs are perfected.
Most require hefty price premiums over conventionally powered vehicles, and many entail glitches in electric and software functions during early test drives.
Others have poor interior craftsmanship and chintzy quality.
Then there is the question of driving range, which is really about the lack of a national electric charging network for drivers.
Still, the excitement reflects something real.
I have written about cars, SUVs, trucks, and motorcycles for nearly two decades, and I have never seen a more exciting, challenging, and surprising time in the automotive industry.
Consumers ultimately will be the biggest winners of the whole electrification process because the vehicles just keep getting better.
Here is a look at the five best purely electric vehicles I drove in 2021.
Mercedes-Benz EQS
The Mercedes-Benz S Class was the single best car I drove this year. Its electric equivalent, the $102,310 (R1.6 million) EQS, lacks a little bit of the extreme sumptuousness and perfect mechanical and technological calibrations of this executive sedan.
But the EV’s engaging touchscreen command center (available in the top-of-the-line EQS 580 4Matic) and powerful quick-drive quality offer a healthy glimpse of how the best electric sedans of the future will feel and perform.
Compared to its competitors, the EQS falls on the higher side of the range-anxiety debate: Its 485-mile (781km) range bests Tesla Model S’s 412 miles (663km) and Porsche Taycan’s sub-300 miles (483km).
It charges to 80% of capacity in 31 minutes with DC fast charging, about the going rate these days.
It is not the fastest vehicle of the lot – the line-topping EQS 580 4Matic gets 516 hp (385kW) and 631 pound-feet (856Nm) of torque and goes from zero to 60 mph (97km/h) in 4.1 seconds on its four-wheel-drive chassis, which is slower than the highest versions of the Taycan and Model S.
But in a car with interior accoutrements and technology that far exceeds those models, the EQS owner will hardly notice – or care about – the difference.
Rivian R1T
This was perhaps the most hyped vehicle of the year, with newbie electric vehicle maker Rivian topping out at $100 billion (R1.6 trillion) in value when it went public in November.
I and some other reporters can take some of the blame for this: I called the R1T the vehicle I most wanted to drive in 2021.
The global electric truck market size is projected to reach $1.9 billion (R30.2 billion) by 2027, according to Allied Market Research, up from $422.5 million (R6.7 billion) in 2019.
What Tesla did for electric cars – force them into mainstream consideration – has yet to be done for electric trucks.
Rivian’s R1T is the first contender.
Aimed at the triathlete mountain-climbing “gorp-core” (good ol’ raisins and peanuts) Silicon Valley tech-bro, the $74,075 (R1.18 million) pickup counts many novel inventions to its name, including a pass-through storage space beneath the truck bed and a factory-installed, on-board air compressor for emergencies in the wilderness.
Plus, it has 314-mile (505km) range and looks at least good enough to support the company’s claim that it’s the “Patagonia of trucks.”
I drove it for a few days on and off roads near Breckenridge, Colorado.
The R1T’s software is still buggy – and it’s not as rugged as similarly priced standbys from Jeep and Land Rover – but it’s an exciting first offer from a company we are sure to see plenty of.
Audi RS eTron GT
The $139,900 (R3.3 million) Audi RS eTron GT is built on the same electric platform as the Porsche Taycan, with the same two-speed automatic transmission from their parent company, Volkswagen.
Both exceed the Tesla Model S in looks, build quality, interior craftsmanship, and infotainment intuitiveness.
So it’s important to note how they differ, especially because the Taycan, which came to market a year ahead of the eTron, is a very strong option for electric vehicle fanatics.
Otherwise, you’re just picking a hood badge you like, right?
To my eye, the e-tron GT looks better than the Taycan.
It is more svelte, with a sleeker roofline – the lowest of any Audi, apart from the R8 – and an aggressive stance enhanced by 21-inch set wheels that are cut like blades and bright LED headlights traced in blue.
A panoramic glass roof comes standard on the base GT, while higher-tuned, more expensive RS versions come standard with a carbon fiber ceiling. (The glass roof on those is optional.)
The most notable new element in the e-tron GT is the Tic Tac-box-sized “shifter”that moves the car from neutral to reverse or drive. (The Taycan has one, too.)
Otherwise, the interior has a minimal quality, with fewer computers and touchscreens than in the Taycan and warm wood-veneer options throughout.
As for performance, the 637-horsepower (475kW) eTron GT has a top speed of 155 mph (250km/h) and a zero-to-60-mph (97km/h) sprint of 3.1 seconds.
Under relaxed driving, it has a range of 232 miles (373km) on one charge.
According to Audi, it will charge from 5% to 80% on a 270kW charger in 22.5 minutes.
The $150,900 (R3.46 million) Taycan Turbo boasts 670 horsepower (500kW), a 161 mph (259km/h) top speed, and a zero-to-60 mph (97km/h) sprint in 3 seconds flat.
At best, it has a range of 212 miles (341km).
So they’re close.
Many consumers will choose according to prior brand loyalties. But the Audi eTron proves that electric sport sedans will be just as engaging and efficient to use as their internal combustion-powered cousins.
As it’s the shiny new thing I drove this year, I give it the edge.
BMW iX
This one was critical for BMW to get right.
The first electric SUV from the Bavarian brand, it – along with the i4 – is the lynchpin for BMW’s target of a tenfold increase in BEV sales from 2020 to 2025, which would represent 15% of the sales mix, or 450,000 units in total, according to Bloomberg Intelligence.
As I said in my review after driving it through the Alps outside Munich, the $83,200 (R1.65 million) rig is not exciting to drive, and it lacks the styling cues of the BMW’s X6M, one of my all-time favorite SUVs.
But with seating for five and 300-plus miles (483km) of driving range, it offers a well-built, thoughtfully appointed cabin and decent handling for its spacious size.
My favorite part was the simplicity of the high-quality, calming cabin and excellent new infotainment interface.
Frameless doors, a panoramic glass sunroof, the open-pore wooden dashboard, crystal-cut buttons, and a scrolling “shifter” all felt warmly modern and not, as sometimes happens, cold and robotic.
Porsche Taycan Cross Turismo
Electric trucks and other truly function-focused electric rigs are coming, but an exceptional electric station wagon is already available. The $90,900 (R2.5 million) Porsche Taycan Cross Turismo combines the proven power and well-made German fabrication of the Taycan with the additional space and practicality of a hatchback wagon.
The entry-level Taycan Cross Turismo has 469-horsepower (350kW) worth of performance packed underneath its body, plus the four drive modes on two “gears”- one for strong power under lower speeds, the other for sustained efficiency at high speeds – and the range of the regular Taycan.
Acceleration is silky smooth, going from zero to 60 mph (97km/h) in 4.8 seconds, with a top speed of 136 mph (219km/h).
Its outback-ready options make this all-wheel-drive wagon really shine.
The Offroad Design Package (R28,300) raises it 10mm above normal ride height (that’s a total of 30mm higher than the Taycan sedan, a whopping inch) and gives it additional protection panels along the bottom of the front, sides, and wheel arches, great for crawling along dusty river bottoms and scruff.
What’s more, it adds two cubic feet of load capacity in the rear – up to nearly 16 cubic feet (453 litres), from 14.3 cubic feet (405 litres) in the regular Taycan.
All told, the Taycan Cross Turismo has 42.8 cubic feet (1,212 litres) of storage space in the back when the rear seats are folded flat.
It’s enough to make anyone want to jump in and head out to explore.
The fact that it’s a well-made electric vehicle that’s truly viable for daily life is the icing on the cake.
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