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Horiba MIRA boss says manufacturers must speed up adoption of cleaner, greener electric engines

Comes on back of Jaguar Land Rover’s commitment put £1 billion into º£½ÇÊÓÆµ electric car production

The Duke of Cambridge inside a hybrid Bosch/Aston Martin DB9 during a visit to MIRA (Image: PA)

Management at a globally recognised vehicle R&D site have called on motor manufacturers and suppliers to speed up their adoption of cleaner, greener electric engines.

Greg Harris, who leads global electrification services at Horiba MIRA on the Leicestershire/Warwickshire border, said spending needed to be stepped up to support investment such as Jaguar Land Rover’s (JLR) recent commitment put £1 billion into º£½ÇÊÓÆµ electric car production.

JLR is going to build the electric vehicles at its Castle Bromwich plant in the West Midlands, starting with a electric version of the Jaguar XJ.

The move will secure 2,700 worker's jobs.

HRH Prince William visit to MIRA

 

JLR said that despite investing heavily in new technology, production lines and battery assembly plants, there needs to be a new industry commitment to building a string of so-called “gigafactories” across the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ to meet eventual demand for battery cells.

Right now those cells are imported from Asia.

Horiba MIRA, which sits on a former airfield at Higham-on-the-Hill on the A5, near Hinckley, is a leading centre for the development of new technologies such as electric engines and self-driving cars.

A Tesla electric car being tested in the climatic wind tunnel at Horiba MIRA

 

It was bought by the £1 billion-plus turnover Japanese Horiba group back in July 2015, and has since seen tens of millions of pounds of investments in facilities, buildings, engineering work and test tracks.