Geely's truck unit Farizon targets Europe with electric cargo van

07 November 2022 - 17:05 By Reuters
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The Homtruck, designed to be an automated, driverless cargo mover for limited areas such as ports and mining areas, will only be sold in China.
The Homtruck, designed to be an automated, driverless cargo mover for limited areas such as ports and mining areas, will only be sold in China.
Image: Supplied

China's Farizon, a new-energy truck maker owned by carmaker Geely, aims to step up expansion beyond its home base with a light cargo van planned for Europe in 2024, the truck producer's CEO said.

Farizon's Fan Xianjun told Reuters the first step in a global cargo van expansion plan will be to enter the European market with an all-electric version of a light cargo truck called the Super Van.

The company aims to become one of Europe's top three electric cargo van suppliers with the Super Van. He didn't disclose production or sales targets, nor detailed investment plans.

“This product is designed to meet the demands of the European market,” Fan said.

Longer term, Farizon is also targeting sales growth in markets including Japan, South Korea, the Middle East, and Southeast Asia, where it has already begun selling vehicles.

Fan was speaking before an event in China on Monday where Farizon was scheduled to show off two all-electric commercial vehicles due to hit the market in China in limited numbers next year.

In addition to the Super Van, Farizon is launching a driverless truck called the Homtruck Cabless. The Homtruck, designed to be an automated, driverless cargo mover for limited areas such as ports and mining areas, will only be sold in China.

Farizon, which started selling vehicles in 2016, sold about 50,000 last year and this year it expects sales to top 60,000, Fan said. Owned by Geely Group, one of China's biggest carmakers, Farizon has also raised more than $300m (about R5.31bn) from outside investors.

Fan said the company's flexible electric vehicle (EV) platform and a so-called drive-by-wire technology developed with help from Geely give it an edge in markets where it will compete against the likes of Ford's e-Transit business.

The drive-by-wire technology allows brake, accelerator pedal and other drivetrain components to be decoupled mechanically from the car's body. That allows Farizon to spin off additional models from the same platform.

The Super Van, an electric urban delivery van, could also be turned into a petrol-electric hybrid camping car or a refrigerated cargo van or a pickup truck, Fan said. Farizon could also spin off a camper van version, targeting a still-niche but fast-growing market in China and potentially other markets.

The Super Van will initially have an all-electric version. That will be followed over time by swappable battery, hybrid and methanol-fuelled versions, he said, without specifying a timetable.

The Super Van and Homtruck will have semi-autonomous driving capabilities, which Fan said are beefed up by satellite-based “high precision, centimetre-level” positioning by satellite. The plan is to offer fully autonomous driving by 2030, the company said.

Those features take advantage of Geely-operated low-orbit satellites sent into orbit by Geely's Geespace satellite unit aboard a Long March-2C rocket with help from the China Academy of Launch Vehicle Technology.

Satellite connectivity for Farizon vehicles is available only in China, Fan said.

Farizon will determine the availability of satellite connections in markets such as Europe “according to the laws and regulations of the related foreign countries and their data security requirements.”


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