Head of MINI outlines future product plans

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aria-label="MINI Countryman exclusive image"The MINI hatch is set to shrink and the Countryman will grow, leaving space in between for a new all-electric SUV. Our exclusive images preview how all three could look

MINI has confirmed a major model shake-up that includes plans to develop a smaller three-door hatchback, a new electric crossover and a larger version of the Countryman. At the same time, slow-selling models such as the Convertible and Clubman, as well as plug-in hybrids, will be dropped as MINI takes the first steps to become an all-electric brand.

The plan for MINI’s next generation of cars is ‘80 per cent’ complete, according to the Head of MINI, Bernd Körber. The first of the company’s three ‘core’ cars to arrive in 2023 will be a smaller three-door hatch, designed to take MINI back to its roots of developing small, functional ‘mobility’. It will come in fully electric and petrol guises.

Speaking exclusively to Automotive Daily’s exclusive partner Auto Express, Körber told us: “When I say small, I mean I want to make a small three-door hatch again. Today there are some restrictions for pedestrian safety, but we would like to, in terms of design and exterior, make the three-door hatch as small as possible.”

The EV will be built in China on an all-new platform by MINI’s joint-venture partner Great Wall, and will be sold globally. The petrol model will have the same design and dimensions, but will be based on BMW Group underpinnings and be built at MINI’s Oxford plant.

Previewed in our exclusive image, the small three-door, whether petrol or electric, will adopt several retro styling cues while staying faithful to MINI’s current design language.

aria-label="MINI electric crossover exclusive image"Following the three-door hatch will be a completely new model from MINI: an electric-only crossover, which is due in 2024. The newcomer is tasked with capitalising on growing consumer appetite for fully electric crossovers, as well as helping MINI gain a stronger foothold in China.

“We only go into segments where we can bring the MINI DNA; this is the guideline on how we develop our portfolio,” Körber explained. “The Countryman will move into a larger segment, and the new hatch will go smaller, which makes space for another crossover.”

Previewed in our exclusive image (above), the newcomer will be based on the same Great Wall-sourced EV platform as the hatch, and be produced in China. Körber told us that the size and look of the new cars will be clearly differentiated from each other.

“You cannot put the three-door hatch face on a compact size SUV. That doesn’t work,” he added. “But customers want the face, they want the friendliness.

“I would say the strength of the next-generation model portfolio is that we have three defined characters, in three volume segments. And I think that also enables MINI to grow globally, but make the next steps in terms of design evolution.

“MINI is very much associated with the three-door hatch; that’s what drives the brand. But I would love to see a development. Look at Porsche, where you have the core model, the 911, but you have an evolution of the brand in authentic areas. And with that also comes design changes. You adapt the design to the segment.”As for the Countryman, Körber explained that MINI’s current largest model will get even bigger for its next generation. “I would say in terms of dimensions, we talk half a segment increase for the Countryman, so in the direction of [BMW] X1 size but with the MINI proportions,” he explained.

aria-label="MINI hatch exclusive image"It will be offered as a petrol, diesel or fully electric model. But unlike the hatch and crossover, it will be based on a single BMW Group-sourced platform. However, there will be no plug-in hybrid versions, because Körber believes that the increased range of the next generation of EVs makes the case for a MINI PHEV redundant.

“Once you get EVs to a range above 400km, I don’t see where there is a use case [for plug-in hybrids]. We see with the MINI Electric. The first data that we have, it’s 40 or 50km maximum drives per day with very few exceptions. I think once you get the EVs to a certain range, for the MINI use case, I don’t see a big market for PHEV,” Körber told us.

The current Countryman is built by third-party firm NedCar at its plant in the Netherlands, but it was recently confirmed that BMW will make the next generation “in house”. That could mean a switch to MINI’s factory in Oxford, but the increase in size could make it feasible for the Countryman to be made at a BMW site elsewhere.

Question marks also hang over the MINI Clubman and the Convertible. Körber said that an official decision on the future of those models had not yet been made, but he “hoped” that the drop-top would make it to another generation, because it’s “one of the very few remaining cabrios in this world and it does a lot for the brand.”

aria-label="JCW badge"John Cooper Works to become sub-brand

Elsewhere at MINI, the company’s boss has revealed to Auto Express that it intends to turn John Cooper Works into its own electrified performance sub-brand, which could even have its own dedicated model.

JCW models currently account for around five per cent of MINI sales, but are among the most profitable models in the portfolio. The firm’s boss Bernd Körber believes that as MINI expands its EV offerings, there’s an opportunity to develop John Cooper Works into something more than it is today.

“The next phase of our portfolio is also about the next generation of John Cooper Works,” Körber explained to Auto Express. “The perception, I would say, when you look at John Cooper Works, it’s not the perception of a full-blown sub-brand. People very often perceive it as our top model or performance model. What we would like to do is make John Cooper Works a real electric performance brand.”

The first offerings from a JCW sub-brand aren’t expected until 2024 at the earliest, and are anticipated to be re-engineered versions of the three new ‘core’ models.

“There will still be a market and customer demand for ICE [internal combustion engine] John Cooper Works, but ultimately the performance [brand] will be electrified, and for MINI it fits,” Körber added. Asked if it was possible that John Cooper Works could develop its own bespoke model, Körber replied: “Not at this stage, but yes.”

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