Plugged in Australia

Jamie

Plugged In Australia is your essential podcast for the latest electric vehicle news tailored to Aussie drivers. We break down fresh updates on sales trends, policy changes like road-user charges and tax exemptions, and infrastructure developments—from charging networks in Sydney to regional rollouts. Get quick insights on new models hitting the market, like affordable BYD imports and Tesla’s latest, plus analysis on how global shifts affect Oz. Whether you’re tracking EV adoption rates or debunking myths, tune in weekly for concise, no-fluff coverage to keep you informed on the road to a greener future. Subscribe now and plug into the conversation

  1. 3d ago

    Episode 70; Deep Dive: Geely EX2 Under $27K, JAC’s $49,988 PHEV Ute and Ampol’s Petrol Warning

    Send us Fan Mail In Episode 70 of Plugged In Australia, the Geely EX2 arrives with Australian pricing from just $26,490 before on-road costs, bringing rear-wheel drive and practical packaging to the affordable EV market. JAC confirms the Hunter plug-in hybrid ute from $49,988, Genesis launches the 478-kilowatt GV60 Magma, and Mercedes-AMG reveals an electric CLA 45 with three motors, simulated gearshifts and up to 500 kilowatts. We also examine Ampol’s acknowledgement that petrol could eventually become commercially unviable, Renault’s upgraded Megane E-Tech, GWM’s electric Ora Touring wagon, MG’s coming semi-solid-state PHEV technology, BYD’s refund offer following a model-year mix-up, Cadillac’s Vistiq recall fix, GWM’s luxury Wey V8X, the five-seat Zeekr 9X, Denza’s extreme electric sports car, and two significant developments in Australian electric heavy transport. TIMESTAMPS00:00 — Intro 01:18 — Geely EX2 priced from $26,490 05:44 — JAC Hunter PHEV starts below $50,000 09:30 — Genesis GV60 Magma launched 12:42 — Ampol discusses petrol’s long-term future 16:26 — Mercedes-AMG’s 500kW electric CLA 45 20:09 — Renault Megane E-Tech Esprit Alpine 23:14 — GWM Ora Touring electric wagon 25:42 — MG’s semi-solid-state PHEV batteries 28:24 — BYD offers refunds over model-year mix-up 33:41 — Cadillac Vistiq recall fix 37:45 — Wey V8X luxury electric SUV 40:23 — Zeekr 9X gains a five-seat version 43:33 — Denza Z sports car pricing and performance 46:23 — New Energy Transport’s first electric prime mover 48:55 — Janus Electric expands North American orders 51:52 — Outro Disclaimer: All specifications, pricing, and information discussed in this episode were correct at the time of recording. The electric vehicle market moves quickly, so we recommend you always check the latest details directly with manufacturers, dealers, or official sources. This podcast provides general news and information only, based on publicly available sources and Australian Consumer Law guidelines. It is not legal, financial, or professional advice. For advice specific to your situation, please contact the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission (ACCC) or seek independent professional guidance. Plugged in Australia and its hosts are not responsible for any decisions, misunderstandings, or purchases made based on the content of this show. Sourcing & Transparency At Plugged in Australia, all our stories are sourced from publicly available news articles and reports. We do not receive any advance information or briefings from brands or manufacturers. Any analysis or opinions we share are based solely on this public information. Our main sources include (though we also use many others, and they vary by episode): https://www.carsales.com.au/https://www.carexpert.com.au/https://thedriven.io/https://www.carsguide.com.auhttps://autotalk.com.auhttps://www.carsguide.com.auhttps://evcentral.com.auhttps://www.drive.com.au

    Episode 70; Deep Dive: Geely EX2 Under $27K, JAC’s $49,988 PHEV Ute and Ampol’s Petrol Warning
  2. Jul 11

    Episode 69; Deep Dive: Record EV Sales, Charging Failures, New Affordable EVs and Electric Trucks

    Send us Fan Mail This week on Plugged In Australia, we’re back with a full deep dive after a rough week off with influenza A. There were no Quick Charge episodes this week and no deep dive last week, and with school holidays now here, there also won’t be Quick Charge episodes next week — but there will be a deep dive. In Episode 69, we cover Australia’s record June vehicle market, Tesla and BYD’s massive sales surge, calls for mandatory EV charger standards after the Telstra outage, the updated Xpeng G6, MG S5 EV, Kia EV3 AWD, Lexus ES electric, Leapmotor B05, Cupra Raval, Jaecoo J8 PHEV, Farizon’s new electric cab chassis, electric trucks being built in Australia, Western Sydney Airport’s electric ground equipment, and more. YouTube timestamps00:00 — Intro and apology 01:30 — Telstra outage exposes EV charging weakness 04:23 — June 2026 record EV sales 07:39 — Tesla sets new Australian sales record 09:38   — BYD almost catches Toyota 12:13 — Kia EV3 AWD coming to Australia 15:04 — BMW iX3 earns first five-star 2026 ANCAP result 17:10 — MG S5 EV gets more range and power 19:24 — Xpeng G6 refreshed and cheaper 27:41 — MG U9 hybrid ute under consideration 35:05 — Toyota HiLux BEV mostly attracting fleets 45:07 — Farizon F3E electric cab chassis 52:32 — Jaecoo J8 PHEV seven-seater 1:02:08 — GWM targets top five 1:12:34 — Leapmotor B05 affordable EV hatch 1:22:09 — Lexus ES EV coming to Australia 1:23:33 — Polestar 4 rear-window version 1:24:56 — Cupra Raval confirmed 1:35:07 — Geely Emgrand EM-i context 1:43:57 — Zeekr LandCruiser fighter and ute interest 1:45:17 — Volvo builds Australian-made electric trucks 1:55:55 — Ausgrid electric prime mover trial 1:17:03 — 148-truck electric freight deal 2:08:45 — Western Sydney Airport electric ground equipment 2:09:54 — Tesla FSD light for older hardware 2:16:34 — BYD Atto 2 update 2:23:00 — Outro Disclaimer: All specifications, pricing, and information discussed in this episode were correct at the time of recording. The electric vehicle market moves quickly, so we recommend you always check the latest details directly with manufacturers, dealers, or official sources. This podcast provides general news and information only, based on publicly available sources and Australian Consumer Law guidelines. It is not legal, financial, or professional advice. For advice specific to your situation, please contact the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission (ACCC) or seek independent professional guidance. Plugged in Australia and its hosts are not responsible for any decisions, misunderstandings, or purchases made based on the content of this show. Sourcing & Transparency At Plugged in Australia, all our stories are sourced from publicly available news articles and reports. We do not receive any advance information or briefings from brands or manufacturers. Any analysis or opinions we share are based solely on this public information. Our main sources include (though we also use many others, and they vary by episode): https://www.carsales.com.au/https://www.carexpert.com.au/https://thedriven.io/https://www.carsguide.com.auhttps://autotalk.com.auhttps://www.carsguide.com.auhttps://evcentral.com.auhttps://www.drive.com.au

    Episode 69; Deep Dive: Record EV Sales, Charging Failures, New Affordable EVs and Electric Trucks
  3. Jun 30 ·  Bonus

    Episode 68; Quick Charge — Cheaper Tavascan, Electric X5 and Volvo’s EX90 Price Cut

    Send us Fan Mail QUICK CHARGE DESCRIPTION In this Quick Charge edition of Plugged In Australia, we cover the biggest EV and plug-in hybrid stories for episode 68: Cupra cuts the entry price of the Tavascan with a new V variant, Australia’s first locally made electric bendy bus hits the road in Perth, BMW confirms the next X5 will include a full-electric iX5 for Australia, GWM reveals more of its Haval H10 plug-in hybrid flagship, Volvo slashes the entry price of the EX90, Hyundai says Australian EV sales have turned a corner, Hongqi prepares for an Australian launch, and BYD is already preparing a major mechanical overhaul for the Atto 2. YOUTUBE TIMESTAMPS00:00 — Intro 00:39 — Cupra Tavascan gets a cheaper entry model 02:27 — Australia’s first locally made electric bendy bus 03:33 — BMW iX5 electric SUV locked in for Australia 05:39 — GWM Haval H10 plug-in hybrid flagship 07:07 — Volvo EX90 price cut 08:33 — Hyundai says EV sales have turned a corner 09:39 — Hongqi prepares for Australian launch 10:45 — BYD Atto 2 major mechanical overhaul 12:09 — Outro Disclaimer: All specifications, pricing, and information discussed in this episode were correct at the time of recording. The electric vehicle market moves quickly, so we recommend you always check the latest details directly with manufacturers, dealers, or official sources. This podcast provides general news and information only, based on publicly available sources and Australian Consumer Law guidelines. It is not legal, financial, or professional advice. For advice specific to your situation, please contact the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission (ACCC) or seek independent professional guidance. Plugged in Australia and its hosts are not responsible for any decisions, misunderstandings, or purchases made based on the content of this show. Sourcing & Transparency At Plugged in Australia, all our stories are sourced from publicly available news articles and reports. We do not receive any advance information or briefings from brands or manufacturers. Any analysis or opinions we share are based solely on this public information. Our main sources include (though we also use many others, and they vary by episode): https://www.carsales.com.au/https://www.carexpert.com.au/https://thedriven.io/https://www.carsguide.com.auhttps://autotalk.com.auhttps://www.carsguide.com.auhttps://evcentral.com.auhttps://www.drive.com.au

    Episode 68; Quick Charge — Cheaper Tavascan, Electric X5 and Volvo’s EX90 Price Cut
  4. Jun 29 ·  Bonus

    Episode 67, Quick Charge, Nissan’s PHEV Ute Lands, BYD Targets Cheap Plug-ins and Australia’s V2G Moment

    Send us Fan Mail In Episode 67 of Plugged In Australia: Quick Charge, we launch the new news delivery format: shorter Quick Charge updates through the week, followed by one deeper end-of-week episode to unpack the biggest stories properly. Today we cover Nissan’s Frontier Pro plug-in hybrid ute arriving in Australia for testing, BYD’s Atto 2 DM-i getting closer to becoming one of Australia’s cheapest PHEVs, the BYD Seal Dynamic being axed, Mazda’s 6e drawing new buyers while Mazda warns of emissions-rule pain, Mitsubishi stepping away from in-house EV development, updated Polestar 4 and Renault Megane E-Tech models, Hyundai’s big V2G milestone, XPeng’s coming self-driving rival, and new child-seat concerns around the Tesla Model Y L. Disclaimer: All specifications, pricing, and information discussed in this episode were correct at the time of recording. The electric vehicle market moves quickly, so we recommend you always check the latest details directly with manufacturers, dealers, or official sources. This podcast provides general news and information only, based on publicly available sources and Australian Consumer Law guidelines. It is not legal, financial, or professional advice. For advice specific to your situation, please contact the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission (ACCC) or seek independent professional guidance. Plugged in Australia and its hosts are not responsible for any decisions, misunderstandings, or purchases made based on the content of this show. Sourcing & Transparency At Plugged in Australia, all our stories are sourced from publicly available news articles and reports. We do not receive any advance information or briefings from brands or manufacturers. Any analysis or opinions we share are based solely on this public information. Our main sources include (though we also use many others, and they vary by episode): https://www.carsales.com.au/https://www.carexpert.com.au/https://thedriven.io/https://www.carsguide.com.auhttps://autotalk.com.auhttps://www.carsguide.com.auhttps://evcentral.com.auhttps://www.drive.com.au

    Episode 67, Quick Charge, Nissan’s PHEV Ute Lands, BYD Targets Cheap Plug-ins and Australia’s V2G Moment
  5. Jun 24 ·  Bonus

    Quick Charge Episode 66; Tesla FSD v14, Kia PV5 and Australia’s New Affordable EV Wave

    Send us Fan Mail QUICK CHARGE DESCRIPTION In this Quick Charge edition of Plugged In Australia, we cover the biggest stories from Episode 66: Tesla Full Self-Driving Supervised v14 rolling out in Australia, Tesla reaching 1000 Supercharger stalls locally, Kia confirming the PV5 electric people mover, Leapmotor upgrading the C10 and confirming another affordable EV, the BYD Shark 6 Performance parts delay, Forthing launching the Taikon 5, and fresh updates from Geely, Chery, Porsche, Denza, Maserati, BMW and Honda. QUICK CHARGE YOUTUBE TIMESTAMPS 0:00 Intro 0:42 Tesla FSD Supervised v14 rolls out in Australia 1:34 Tesla Supercharger milestone and Cybercab testing 2:07 Kia PV5 Passenger confirmed 3:15 Leapmotor C10 upgrade and B03X confirmed 4:24 BYD Shark 6 Performance parts delay 4:59 Forthing Taikon 5 launches from $36,990 drive-away 8:55 Geely EX2, EX5 facelift and Lepas L6 6:20 Chery Stockman PHEV ute 7:06 Porsche Taycan fake shifts and no electric 911 7:36 Denza N9, Maserati Folgore and BMW iX5  8:26 Honda Super-One & NSW road-user-charge debate 9:20 Outro Disclaimer: All specifications, pricing, and information discussed in this episode were correct at the time of recording. The electric vehicle market moves quickly, so we recommend you always check the latest details directly with manufacturers, dealers, or official sources. This podcast provides general news and information only, based on publicly available sources and Australian Consumer Law guidelines. It is not legal, financial, or professional advice. For advice specific to your situation, please contact the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission (ACCC) or seek independent professional guidance. Plugged in Australia and its hosts are not responsible for any decisions, misunderstandings, or purchases made based on the content of this show. Sourcing & Transparency At Plugged in Australia, all our stories are sourced from publicly available news articles and reports. We do not receive any advance information or briefings from brands or manufacturers. Any analysis or opinions we share are based solely on this public information. Our main sources include (though we also use many others, and they vary by episode): https://www.carsales.com.au/https://www.carexpert.com.au/https://thedriven.io/https://www.carsguide.com.auhttps://autotalk.com.auhttps://www.carsguide.com.auhttps://evcentral.com.auhttps://www.drive.com.au

    Quick Charge Episode 66; Tesla FSD v14, Kia PV5 and Australia’s New Affordable EV Wave
  6. Jun 24

    Episode 66, Deep Dive: Tesla FSD v14, Kia PV5 and Australia’s Next Affordable EV Wave

    Send us Fan Mail In Episode 66 of Plugged In Australia, we look at Tesla Full Self-Driving Supervised v14 rolling out in Australia, Tesla’s 1000th local Supercharger stall, and Cybercab prototypes appearing in New Zealand. We also cover Kia’s PV5 electric people mover, Leapmotor’s upgraded C10 and incoming B03X, the BYD Shark 6 Performance parts delay, Porsche adding fake gear shifts to the Taycan while ruling out an electric 911, and a wave of new affordable EVs and EREVs from Forthing, Geely, Lepas, Chery, Honda and more. Plus, we look at Denza’s big N9 PHEV SUV, Maserati’s longer-range Folgore update, BMW’s huge-battery iX5, and the renewed debate over EV road-user charges in NSW. YOUTUBE TIMESTAMPS 0:00 Intro 1:05 Tesla FSD Supervised v14 rolls out in Australia 5:54 Tesla passes 1000 Supercharger stalls and Cybercab appears in New Zealand 9:35 Kia PV5 Passenger confirmed for Australia 14:16 Leapmotor C10 gets more range, power and faster charging 17:03  Leapmotor B03X confirmed and safety beeps explained 21:39 BYD Shark 6 Performance arrives with parts delay 25:15 Forthing Taikon 5 launches as cheap BEV and EREV SUV 32:16 Geely EX2 approved and EX5 facelift moves rear-drive 35:40 Lepas L6 confirmed and Chery Stockman PHEV ute named 39:51 Porsche Taycan fake shifts and no electric 911 44:03 Denza N9, Maserati Grecale Folgore and BMW iX5 49:33 Honda Super-One and NSW road-user-charge debate Disclaimer: All specifications, pricing, and information discussed in this episode were correct at the time of recording. The electric vehicle market moves quickly, so we recommend you always check the latest details directly with manufacturers, dealers, or official sources. This podcast provides general news and information only, based on publicly available sources and Australian Consumer Law guidelines. It is not legal, financial, or professional advice. For advice specific to your situation, please contact the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission (ACCC) or seek independent professional guidance. Plugged in Australia and its hosts are not responsible for any decisions, misunderstandings, or purchases made based on the content of this show. Sourcing & Transparency At Plugged in Australia, all our stories are sourced from publicly available news articles and reports. We do not receive any advance information or briefings from brands or manufacturers. Any analysis or opinions we share are based solely on this public information. Our main sources include (though we also use many others, and they vary by episode): https://www.carsales.com.au/https://www.carexpert.com.au/https://thedriven.io/https://www.carsguide.com.auhttps://autotalk.com.auhttps://www.carsguide.com.auhttps://evcentral.com.auhttps://www.drive.com.au

    Episode 66, Deep Dive: Tesla FSD v14, Kia PV5 and Australia’s Next Affordable EV Wave
  7. Jun 15

    Episode 65 | Deep Dive: Smaller Cadillac Batteries, Ferrari’s Forever Pack and BMW’s Electric M3

    Send us Fan Mail In Episode 65 of Plugged In Australia, we look at why the Cadillac Optiq and Vistiq are arriving with smaller batteries and slower DC charging than their US equivalents, Ferrari’s unusual plan to make the Luce battery repairable and upgradable for decades, and the possibility of a petrol range-extender version of the Leapmotor B05 hatch. We also cover Volvo’s next XC40 returning to an electric-first direction, the expanded NSW EV fleet funding program, and BMW’s four-motor, 800-volt M Concept Neue Klasse previewing the first full-electric M car due from 2027.  YOUTUBE TIMESTAMPS 0:00 Intro 1:01 Cadillac explains Australia’s smaller Optiq and Vistiq batteries 10:02 Ferrari designs the Luce battery for decades of repair and upgrades 18:02 Leapmotor considers a B05 range-extender hatch 24:44 Volvo’s next XC40 could return to an electric-first platform 31:35 NSW extends and expands EV fleet funding 40:00  BMW previews the first full-electric M car 48:50 Outro Disclaimer: All specifications, pricing, and information discussed in this episode were correct at the time of recording. The electric vehicle market moves quickly, so we recommend you always check the latest details directly with manufacturers, dealers, or official sources. This podcast provides general news and information only, based on publicly available sources and Australian Consumer Law guidelines. It is not legal, financial, or professional advice. For advice specific to your situation, please contact the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission (ACCC) or seek independent professional guidance. Plugged in Australia and its hosts are not responsible for any decisions, misunderstandings, or purchases made based on the content of this show. Sourcing & Transparency At Plugged in Australia, all our stories are sourced from publicly available news articles and reports. We do not receive any advance information or briefings from brands or manufacturers. Any analysis or opinions we share are based solely on this public information. Our main sources include (though we also use many others, and they vary by episode): https://www.carsales.com.au/https://www.carexpert.com.au/https://thedriven.io/https://www.carsguide.com.auhttps://autotalk.com.auhttps://www.carsguide.com.auhttps://evcentral.com.auhttps://www.drive.com.au

    Episode 65 | Deep Dive: Smaller Cadillac Batteries, Ferrari’s Forever Pack and BMW’s Electric M3
  8. Jun 15 ·  Bonus

    Quick Charge | Episode 65 | June 15th 2026: Cadillac Battery Cuts, Ferrari’s Forever Pack and BMW’s Electric M Future

    Send us Fan Mail In this Quick Charge edition of Plugged In Australia, we cover why the Cadillac Optiq and Vistiq coming to Australia have smaller batteries and slower DC charging than their US equivalents, Ferrari’s repairable and upgradable Luce battery, the possible Leapmotor B05 range extender, Volvo’s next electric compact SUV, expanded NSW fleet funding, and BMW’s four-motor electric M car preview. QUICK CHARGE YOUTUBE TIMESTAMPS 0:00 Intro 0:33 Cadillac’s smaller Australian batteries 2:21 Ferrari’s repairable and upgradable Luce battery 3:31 Leapmotor considers a B05 range extender 4:39 Volvo’s next compact electric SUV 5:32 NSW expands EV fleet funding 6:49 BMW previews its first electric M car 8:22 Outro Disclaimer: All specifications, pricing, and information discussed in this episode were correct at the time of recording. The electric vehicle market moves quickly, so we recommend you always check the latest details directly with manufacturers, dealers, or official sources. This podcast provides general news and information only, based on publicly available sources and Australian Consumer Law guidelines. It is not legal, financial, or professional advice. For advice specific to your situation, please contact the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission (ACCC) or seek independent professional guidance. Plugged in Australia and its hosts are not responsible for any decisions, misunderstandings, or purchases made based on the content of this show. Sourcing & Transparency At Plugged in Australia, all our stories are sourced from publicly available news articles and reports. We do not receive any advance information or briefings from brands or manufacturers. Any analysis or opinions we share are based solely on this public information. Our main sources include (though we also use many others, and they vary by episode): https://www.carsales.com.au/https://www.carexpert.com.au/https://thedriven.io/https://www.carsguide.com.auhttps://autotalk.com.auhttps://www.carsguide.com.auhttps://evcentral.com.auhttps://www.drive.com.au

    Quick Charge | Episode 65 | June 15th 2026: Cadillac Battery Cuts, Ferrari’s Forever Pack and BMW’s Electric M Future

About

Plugged In Australia is your essential podcast for the latest electric vehicle news tailored to Aussie drivers. We break down fresh updates on sales trends, policy changes like road-user charges and tax exemptions, and infrastructure developments—from charging networks in Sydney to regional rollouts. Get quick insights on new models hitting the market, like affordable BYD imports and Tesla’s latest, plus analysis on how global shifts affect Oz. Whether you’re tracking EV adoption rates or debunking myths, tune in weekly for concise, no-fluff coverage to keep you informed on the road to a greener future. Subscribe now and plug into the conversation

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