Kia’s all-electric EV6 crossover will have a 585bhp performance version

GT version will deliver a 0-100km/h time of just 3.5 seconds

Kia’s new EV6: two battery formats will be offered: a 58kWh with a range of 400km and a 77.4kWh version with a range in excess of 510km

Kia has revealed details of its new all-electric EV6 which arrives in Irish showrooms this autumn, promising not just a family-sized plug-in crossover, but a high-performance version as well.

Built on the same new platform as its sister brand Hyundai’s upcoming Ioniq 5, the new EV6 is slightly longer and taller.

While there are obvious similarities between the cars given their common underpinnings, one way to consider the two cars is in comparison with arch-rival Volkswagen. Where the Hyundai Ioniq 5 is set to challenge the family hatchback VW ID.3, this Kia EV6 is targeting the more crossover-like ID.4.

Alongside being a rival to the VW ID.4 crossover, the Korean brand is promising something very spicy: a 585hp GT version capable of 0-100km/h in 3.5 seconds and a top speed of 260km/h.

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Batteries

For more regular fare, two battery formats will be offered: a 58kWh with a range of 400km in rear-wheel drive format and 380km in all-wheel drive; and a 77.4kWh version with a range in excess of 510km in rear-wheel drive format and 490km in all-wheel drive.

Kia’s new EV6: a 585hp GT version will be capable of 0-100km/h in 3.5 seconds and a top speed of 260km/h

The rear-wheel drive pairs the rear axle with a 160kW electric motor, while the all-wheel drive adds a further 70kW motor to the front axle.

For the high-performance version, those motors are replaced with a 160kW on the front axle and 270kW on the rear.

Kia is promising real European driving flair for the new car, crediting the fact the EV6’s development included time spent in twists and turns of the famous Nurburgring.

Vehicle-to-vehicle charging

Two interesting new features in the car include an active cruise control system that taps into machine-learning technology to adapt its braking style to the way you normally drive, and a vehicle-to-vehicle charging system (over V2V as they call it) that will let you donate some of your battery charge to less fortunate electric car owners who have run out of power.

In design terms the EV6 measures in at 4.7 metres, with a wheelbase of 2.9 metres and bootspace of 520-1,300 litres, making it a sizeable family crossover, but it's slightly lower to the ground than most of its rivals, giving drivers a slightly lower seating position than in the likes of the ID.4 or Tesla Model Y.

In keeping with its crossover claims, it can tow up to 1,600kgs in weight.

As it shares its powertrain and platform with the Hyundai Ioniq 5, that means it also features the same fast-charging systems. So it can take a charge from an operating voltage of 800 volts and when hooked up to a 350kW charger the battery power can increase from a 10 per cent charge to 80 per cent in just 18 minutes. Kia has done the maths on this and reckons you can get 100km of range out of the EV6 from this sort of charger in just 4 ½ minutes.

Sustainability

While this is certainly not Kia's first electric car – its e-Niro and e-Soul models have been selling well in Ireland already – it's the first car developed and built solely as an electric car.

And it heralds a fleet of new cars. After this EV6 will come another six new all-electric models built on this e-GMP platform, along with four additional all-electric versions of existing models. In total Kia plans to offer 11 all-electric vehicles by 2026.

Kia’s new EV6: Two new wraparound digital screens dominate the dash.

"EV6 represents the beginning of Kia's long-term commitment to sustainable mobility, accelerating the transition not only to clean transportation, but also products, materials and manufacturing," says Ho Sung Song, Kia's president and chief executive.

That commitment to sustainability features inside the car, where all “leather trim” will be made using vegan materials. Meanwhile the interior also features recycle plastics - equivalent to 111 plastic water bottles.

Michael McAleer

Michael McAleer

Michael McAleer is Motoring Editor, Innovation Editor and an Assistant Business Editor at The Irish Times