Hyundai to announce all blue ix20

We know it should be green, but when Hyundai talk about environmental technology in cars they see it as blue.

Hyundai ix20 Blue Drive

Oh well never mind. Today will all be unveiled at the 2010 Paris Motor Show where Hyundai will give us more information on its new b-segment people carrier, the ix20, as well as a new saloon car called the Optima, a facelift i10 with tiny 1.0 engine and 99 g/km emissions and a rather funky looking concept called the POP.

Hyundai ix20 concept
Essentially it’s a Kia Venga but with a new ‘Fluidic Design’ dreamed up by Hyundai’s new team of design engineers at their European R&D centre in Russelsheim, Germany. The new design apparently reduces weight and allows the air to flow more efficiently over the streamlined curves, reducing drag and improving overall performance.

However, it’s under the bonnet where it all matters these days as car makers scramble to reduce emissions, reducing the taxation in our wallets and tempting us into their showrooms. Road fund licencing bands has become of upper most importance to the majority of car buyers and factors heavily in their buying decisions.

Hyundai & Kia have been busy in this department, bringing us ISG Stop & Go technologies, new efficient designs and a flurry of concepts showing new ways of building safer cars out of thin air.

Today Hyundai will show us how their investment has paid off and reveal not only a new competitor in the b-segment class, but also one that can carry 5 people and their luggage comfortably without destroying the ozone layer. Enter the Blue Drive ix20.

It’s going to be powered by the same engine that Kia will also unveil today in their Venga. A new 1.4 diesel engine from their new U2 family range of engines, which produces 75 bhp and only 114 g/km of CO2. This will mean a band C rating and £30 a year road tax which is pretty impressive for a car of this size.

ISG Stop & Go will be a given as this also helps reduce emissions, as well as low-rolling resistance, high pressure tyres. What we don’t know is the performance figures as early reviews are suggesting the Venga, with it’s current 89 bhp diesel engine, is left a little wanting on the acceleration stakes.

Still the way things are going with car design we’ll all be driving around in bubbles and floating along nicely at 30mph. But we’ll be content because we also know were saving the planet.

What Car? Goes Green

What Car? has today announced that it is the first car magazine to go climate neutral. The UK’s leading provider of car buying information has teamed up with Climate Care to offset all the carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions it produces while assessing cars, by its office energy needs and even by its travel around the world attending global car launches.

Tom Morton, Managing Director, Climate Care said. ‘We are delighted to work with What Car? and help make their activities climate neutral. The automotive industry is central to our attempts to tackle climate change and for such key opinion shapers to take a leading role is a clear sign that the industry is starting to rise to the challenge."

The CO2 produced in putting What Car? together every month is now being countered by Climate Care’s programme, which includes fitting energy-efficient bulbs in Kazakhstan, providing efficient cooking stoves in Bangladesh and replanting forests in Uganda.

Steve Fowler, What Car? group editor, said: ‘What Car? has always promoted the responsible use of cars and we’re leading the way by offsetting our own carbon output – we’ll be encouraging our readers to follow suit. It doesn’t have to cost the earth, either – the owner of an average Ford Focus covering around 12,000 miles a year need only make an annual contribution of around £21 to offset the CO2 they produce when driving."

A recent What Car? survey revealed that 41% of motorists are prepared to pay a premium for cleaner cars.

Coinciding with What Car?’s partnership with Climate Care, it has produced the definitive Driver’s Guide to Going Green – a 64-page magazine free with the May 2006 issue of What Car?, offering thoroughly researched advice and information for car buyers and users on going green and saving cash.