MINI-EV coming to US in 2009, diesel possible too
Since the introduction of the modern MINI to the US market in 2002, the
brand has proved that small cars can be thought of as premium models.
The recent spike in fuel prices has been particularly beneficial to
MINI which has seen its US sales jump 34 percent through the first half
of 2008.
Jim McDowell, VP of MINI USA met with members of the media in
Birmingham MI to discuss the BMW brand's success and where the company
is going. Earlier in BMW Sources told Automotive News that the company
planned to build 500 battery powered and send the bulk of them to
California for testing. Green Fuels Forecast asked McDowell for more
details on the electric MINI plans.
McDowell explained that the his team was caught by surprise with this
news from the parent company. At this time neither BMW AG in Germany
or MINI has finalized the plans for the introduction of the electric
car or its specifications. Everything regarding the first electric car
from BMW Group is still "in progress." McDowell was not able to tell
GFF what type of battery technology will be used in the MINI-EV. BMW
will be using lithium ion batteries in the hybrid vehicles that it will
introduce in 2009.
McDowell did reveal that the MINI-EV "will be on the road in the hands
of real customers by this time next year (summer 2009)." The company
has not yet decided if the cars will be leased or sold, although
McDowell did say that the MINI-EV "could go nationwide."
One of the keys to MINI's recent success in the US market has been fuel
economy. The MINI Cooper is among the most fuel efficient non-hybrid
vehicles available. The manual transmission MINI Cooper is currently
EPA rated at 28/37mpg city/highway. Diesel Forecast recently tested a
European market MINI Cooper D and achieved 47mpg in real world driving.
When GFF asked McDowell about offering the MINI D in the US market, he
acknowledged that the company "would like a diesel" but it would "want
it to be a 50 state model" and "be rated at more than 50mpg." Since the
MINI diesel has a small displacement 1.6L engine it could probably be
modified to meet Tier 2 Bin 5 NOx emissions standards with a lean NOx
trap rather than a urea injection system.
McDowell gave no indication of when a diesel might potentially arrive
in the US market. MINI is currently selling every car they can get and
finished June 2008 with a four day supply of cars. MINI USA hopes to
get an extra 2,000-3,000 cars above what was originally scheduled from
the Oxford England factory through the remainder of 2008. Until more
production capacity becomes available, it seems unlikely that a diesel
MINI will be offered unless BMW needs it to meet fleet average mileage
numbers in the coming years.
McDowell made it clear that the company does not consider the tiny MINI
to be the best car for most people. However, it wants the MINI to be
"the perfect car for some." MINI intends to stay a "small car company"
in both overall sales volumes and the size of its vehicles. Even the
upcoming fourth MINI model, a crossover, will remain small and low to
the ground to maintain the brand's reputation for excellent handling.

