Skip to main content

Kia’s future includes self-driving cars, more electrified models, car sharing

Kia Niro EV concept
Image used with permission by copyright holder
At CES, Kia is cornering the market on buzzwords. The Korean automaker announced a host of new initiatives involving self-driving cars, electrified powertrains, connectivity and carsharing.

Kia and parent company Hyundai are already experimenting with self-driving cars, but Kia plans to step up those efforts over the next few years. The automaker plans to deploy a “large-scale” test fleet of autonomous cars on public roads in 2019. In 2021, Kia will launch a pilot program for Level 4 autonomous cars in what the company calls “smart cities.” Kia said this will be its first attempt to commercialize self-driving cars, so that will probably be the first opportunity ordinary people get to ride in these robo-Kias.

Recommended Videos

Some of those self-driving cars may feature zero-emission powertrains. Kia says it will offer a total of 16 electrified models by 2025. The automaker’s lineup already includes hybrids, plug-in hybrids, and the all-electric Soul EV, but it will also add a hydrogen fuel-cell vehicle in 2020. Kia will probably lean on parent Hyundai’s fuel-cell expertise for that.

Kia used CES to debut the Niro EV concept (pictured above), an all-electric version of a car that is already offered as a hybrid and plug-in hybrid. The Niro EV concept sports a 150-kilowatt (201-horsepower) electric motor, and a claimed 238 miles of range. It also features slightly different styling than the Niro hybrid and plug-in hybrid production variants. Given that it’s based on a model that’s already in production, we wouldn’t be surprised to see the Niro EV make the transition from concept to showroom-ready model.

Please enable Javascript to view this content

In addition to its all-electric powertrain, the Niro EV concept also features a new human-machine interface. The HMI emphasizes gesture and touch controls, and even allows the driver to control infotainment functions by swiping specified areas of the steering wheel. Kia will also demonstrate in an in-car 5G connection, and an audio system that allows front-seat and rear-seat occupants to hear different sounds. It’s unclear if any of these features will make it to production.

Finally, Kia will launch a carsharing service in Europe later this year. Called WiBLE (for “widely accessible”), it’s essentially Kia’s answer to BMW’s ReachNow and Daimler’s Car2Go. Users can reserve a car using a smartphone app, and pay according to how much driving they do. The service may be offered outside of Europe at a future date, Kia said.

Stephen Edelstein
Stephen is a freelance automotive journalist covering all things cars. He likes anything with four wheels, from classic cars…
Tesla pulls latest Full Self-Driving beta less than a day after release
The view from a Tesla vehicle.

False collision warnings and other issues have prompted Tesla to pull the latest version of its Full Self-Driving (FSD) beta less than a day after rolling it out for some vehicle owners.

Tesla decided to temporarily roll back to version 10.2 of FSD on Sunday following reports from some drivers of false collision warnings, sudden braking without any apparent reason, and the disappearance of the Autosteer option, among other issues.

Read more
Waymo’s self-driving cars can’t get enough of one dead-end street
waymo

Waymo has been testing its self-driving cars in San Francisco for the last decade. But an apparent change to the vehicles’ routing has caused many of them to make a beeline for a dead-end street in a quiet part of the city, causing residents there to wonder what on earth is going on.

At CBS news crew recently visited the site -- 15th Avenue north of Lake Street in Richmond -- to see if it could work out why so many of Waymo’s autonomous cars are showing up, turning around, and then driving right out again.

Read more
Watch San Franciscans take a ride in Waymo’s self-driving car
Waymo Jaguar I-Pace

Waymo is inviting San Francisco residents to hop inside its self-driving vehicles for a drive around the city.

Welcoming our first riders in San Francisco

Read more