Chinese electric vehicle maker Zeekr on Wednesday launched a compact, all-electric sports utility vehicle, as it targeted a premium market in China that has been dominated by German automakers.
The Geely-owned brand said it also planned to offer the SUV-styled Zeekr X and its Zeekr 001 EV sedan in Europe without saying when that would be.
With a starting price of 189,800 yuan (US$27,615.31) in China, the Zeekr X offers features such as the ability to unlock the car using facial recognition technology and an option for an in-vehicle refrigerator, CEO Andy An told an event in China's southwestern city of Chengdu.
The company will start delivering the Zeekr X SUV in China from June this year, he said.
Zeekr's event to launch the new model took place ahead of the Auto Shanghai show, scheduled for April 18-27, where automakers such as fellow Chinese brand Nio and Germany's BMW are expected to show off their latest models.
An said Zeekr would provide more details on its strategy for Europe then.
EV makers such as Zeekr and Nio have taken market share from German automakers such as Mercedes Benz and BMW in China by launching EV models more quickly.
In also targeting sales in Europe, Zeekr joins a range of Chinese automakers that are selling or planning to deliver EVs for that market, including BYD, Xpeng and SAIC's MG brand.
French auto consultancy Inovev estimates Chinese brands will represent up to 20 percent of EVs sold in Europe by 2030.
Pure electric and plug-in hybrid cars, accounted for 44 percent of first-quarter sales of premium cars in China, data from China Association of Automobile Manufacturers show.
While Geely founder Eric Li has ambitions for Zeekr, it lags EV peers in China.
It sold 15,234 of its two existing models - the 001 sedan and the 009 multi-purpose vehicle - in the first quarter, accounting for just 2 percent of China's battery electric vehicle sales. By comparison, Nio had sold 31,041 vehicles in the same period while Tesla sold 137,429.
Zeekr aims to double annual sales in 2023 to about 140,000 vehicles. (Reuters)