A replacement for the decade-old Mazda 6 may still be in the works – but as a hybrid or electric car developed and built in China.
A successor to the ageing Mazda 6 sedan may be in development after all, with the choice of hybrid or electric power – but from an unlikely source: China.
Mazda executives have repeatedly poured cold water on plans for a new Mazda 6 – replacing the current model introduced in 2012 – using the new rear-wheel-drive architecture and six-cylinder engines beneath the latest CX-60 and CX-90 SUVs.
But if a teaser image shown by Mazda in China (spotted by @cars_secrets on Instagram) is a guide, plans for a next-generation Mazda 6 sedan of some form may not be dead – alongside a next-generation Mazda 3 small sedan.
An image shown during a press conference by Changan Mazda – the Japanese car maker’s joint venture in China with local firm Changan – at the Shanghai motor show last month teases two new models, with plug-in hybrid or battery-electric power.
MORE: Rear-wheel-drive Mazda 6 successor still unlikely on CX-60 chassis
The new models are pictured under a cover, but clearly adopt a sedan body style – which has led to speculation they are replacements for the current Mazda 3 and Mazda 6 sedans, both of which are available in China.
The two vehicles appear to be different sizes, and could be based on a front-wheel-drive petrol-car platform, or a dedicated electric-car chassis, given the small gap between the front wheels and the windscreen pillars – which would need to be much larger on a rear-wheel-drive, petrol car.
The cars are not named as new Mazda 3 and Mazda 6 sedans, launch timing is not given, and it is unclear if what platform they will be underpinned by, or if they are planned for Australia.
Although there is a chance the the sedan profiles seen in the teaser are not representative of the final vehicles – and they could instead adopt a different body style – the subtle distinction in the sizes of the vehicle suggests the decision to represent sedans is intentional.
Mazda has announced plans to introduce three electric vehicles by 2025 – alongside five plug-in hybrids and five traditional hybrids – on an architecture dubbed the ‘SkyActiv Multi-Solution Scalable Architecture’.
Some of the hybrids will use technology sourced from Toyota, but it’s unclear if the electric cars will do the same.
This architecture is a likely starter for the two Chinese-market sedans, as it can accommodate plug-in hybrid and solely electric power.
Due after 2025 is a dedicated electric-car platform known as the SkyActiv EV Scalable Architecture, which is set to underpin an even broader range of battery-powered models.
While it offers the small MX-30 Electric in Australia – with 200km of driving range and a 35kWh battery – in China it offers a battery-powered version of the petrol CX-30 small SUV (below), with a circa-60kWh battery pack and 450km of claimed driving range (in more lenient testing).
However, it is produced and sold exclusively in China, and the electric CX-30’s awkward jacked-up stance – a result of needing to package the battery under the chassis – suggests it was conceived after the petrol-powered versions were penned.
It is unclear if the mooted hybrid and electric Mazda 6 successor will be sold outside of China, where it is expected to be produced.
However, sedan sales are declining faster outside of China than within it – and Mazda does not currently export any of its models from China to Europe, the US or Australia.
A Chinese-produced Mazda 6 would be unlikely for US sale, where there are heavy tariffs on Chinese-made passenger cars – and the electric version would miss out on US government rebates for electric cars and batteries built in North America.
The post Is this the new Mazda 6? Mystery electric sedans teased in China appeared first on Drive.
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