What's in a Name? Volvo Reveals 'XC40 Recharge' and 'Volvo Recharge'

Steph Willems
by Steph Willems

Volvo Cars’ new electric crossover has a name, and it just happens to be something people hate doing. The XC40 is the brand’s new EV, crafted out of the compact XC40 crossover and helped in its mission by the model’s versatile modular platform. To make it work, Volvo first carried out some alterations. See details here.

“Recharge” isn’t just the name applied to the brand’s new EV ⁠— it’s a new sub-brand under which all upcoming EVs and plug-in hybrids will reside. An invitation to confusion or buried psychological disdain? Possibly.

As plug-in hybrids are not a new thing in the Volvo lineup, the brand already boasts numerous vehicles worthy of the badge. And they’ll get that badge, starting now. As more fully-electric models enter the fray, they too will gain a Recharge label.

It’s something of an odd strategy to lump both PHEVs and EVs under the same banner, as donning the name “Recharge” implies that the vehicle requires it. In a PHEV, one needn’t plug in their vehicle ever again, should they choose to ignore why they paid thousands more for such a feature.

As for EVs, range anxiety remains an issue afflicting the segment, despite advances in battery capacity and driving radius. You can’t carry a jerry can of electricity back to your car after paying the occupants of a nearby farmhouse for it. With this in mind, naming a vehicle after the thing that weighs heavily on the psyche of some buyers is an interesting decision.

Then again, Volvo has an aggressive electrification plan underway. The brand hopes to make EVs account for half of the automaker’s sales by 2025 ⁠— a lofty goal, to be sure, given current adoption rates (Europe and Asia will clearly do the heavy lifting). All Volvo models will be electrified in some way under the plan, meaning no purely gas-powered vehicles. The automaker expects PHEVs to make up 20 percent of its volume next year.

“From early 2020 customers entering the Volvo Cars website will first be asked whether they want a Volvo Recharge car or not,” the automaker stated. “To further encourage electric driving, every Volvo Recharge plug-in hybrid model will come with free electricity for a year, provided through a refund for the average electricity cost during that period.”

As for the XC40 Recharge, the all-wheel drive crossover generates up to 408 horsepower and boasts a range of 249 miles on the European WLTP cycle. EPA figures should pare this back to just over 200 miles.

The XC40 Recharge carries another innovation for the company that, like the powertrain, is often associated with the act of recharging. The model is Volvo’s first vehicle outfitted with Google’s Android operating system as the brains behind the infotainment screen.

Expect pricing to land closer to the model’s on-sale date.

[Images: Volvo Cars]

Steph Willems
Steph Willems

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  • ToddAtlasF1 ToddAtlasF1 on Oct 17, 2019

    It was bound to happen. Something was lost in translation from the original Chinese and Geely named their new EV in a way that serves as a brutal reminder that buyers have chosen a technology that's been justifiably obsolete for a century.

    • See 1 previous
    • ToddAtlasF1 ToddAtlasF1 on Oct 17, 2019

      @SCE to AUX It needs to refer to the least desirable quality of their product, like "Overpriced Chinese Garbage," or considering their involvement in totalitarian efforts to give our cars illegal search and seizure capabilities, "Commie POS."

  • HotPotato HotPotato on Oct 18, 2019

    Ugh. Picking the name of the thing that's most feared and misunderstood by EV novices will just scare off ICE drivers. And lumping the PHEVs in with the EVs will drive off EV buyers, since Volvo's PHEVs are the usual bad-faith Euro tax-dodge variety that's unable to eke out more than maybe a dozen miles range, and can't keep the ICE extinguished unless you drive like there's a fragile ostrich egg under the accelerator. Marketing fail from either angle. That said: 408 horsepower in a subcompact CUV!? That sounds like some tire-shredding fun. Let me guess: Volvo isn't targeting a price of just $40k before incentives for this tough little robot anymore.

  • Pig_Iron This message is for Matthew Guy. I just want to say thank you for the photo article titled Tailgate Party: Ford Talks Truck Innovations. It was really interesting. I did not see on the home page and almost would have missed it. I think it should be posted like Corey's Cadillac series. 🙂
  • Analoggrotto Hyundai GDI engines do not require such pathetic bandaids.
  • Slavuta They rounded the back, which I don't like. And inside I don't like oval shapes
  • Analoggrotto Great Value Seventy : The best vehicle in it's class has just taken an incremental quantum leap towards cosmic perfection. Just like it's great forebear, the Pony Coupe of 1979 which invented the sportscar wedge shape and was copied by the Mercedes C111, this Genesis was copied by Lexus back in 1998 for the RX, and again by BMW in the year of 1999 for the X5, remember the M Class from the Jurassic Park movie? Well it too is a copy of some Hyundai luxury vehicles. But here today you can see that the de facto #1 luxury SUV in the industry remains at the top, the envy of every drawing board, and pentagon data analyst as a pure statement of the finest automotive design. Come on down to your local Genesis dealership today and experience acronymic affluence like never before.
  • SCE to AUX Figure 160 miles EPA if it came here, minus the usual deductions.It would be a dud in the US market.
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