2019 Hyundai Kona Electric and Nexo Review: Two Great EVs, One Hard Choice
Driving Hyundai's new electric carsAs if on cue, almost everybody around our white linen dinner table stops for a simultaneous phone-check; the faces of the journalists and our Hyundai hosts dip into puddles of phone-screen illumination. I'm old enough to find this a strange new custom but … hmm, I see that my pal, Larry, is asking what I'm driving today.
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I type back "Hyundai Nexo fuel cell vehicle and the Kona Electric." A few months ago he banged-up his Mustang and took over the lease of a Mirai as his daily driver because he thought it was a good deal.
"You have no idea how much anxiety the Mirai has given me" he quickly types back. "I believe in Elon Musk now."
Larry's really angry. He sends me a screen-cap of a cafcp.org (California Fuel Cell Partnership) map of the hydrogen stations he's staring at right now. His 24-mile daily drive from West Covina to Rancho Cucamonga (that's laterally—and literally—right across the L.A. basin) traverses a hydrogen desert with just two oases of H2 that are even close if he doesn't backtrack.
I cannot imagine this routine. It has me reprocessing everything about what happened today.
Within six hours, I've driven two CUVs from the same manufacturer that in my opinion are the best hydrogen fuel cell and affordable battery electric car you can buy. The Nexo's 354-380-mile range overwhelms the Toyota Mirai's official 312-miles and is comparable to the Honda Clarity's 366-miles. The Kona Electric's 258 miles of range easily short-circuits the Bolt's 238-mile claim to fame. And even if we set these terrific numbers aside—which of course, you absolutely can't—they really do drive better than any of their rivals.
So here we have the best of their respective breeds. And I know what you're probably thinking: 'Who cares? I wouldn't buy either one anyway.'
On October 7, that was a sort-of passable answer. On October 8, the UN's Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change issued humanity an unequivocal ultimatum: We have about a dozen years to limit the rise in temperature to 1.5 C to avoid the most terrifying consequences of global warming. And even at 1.5 (which we're racing toward) we'll still struggle with a lot of pretty bad stuff. To stop it at 1.5, "global net human-caused emissions of carbon dioxide (CO2) would need to fall by about 45 percent from 2010 levels by 2030, reaching 'net zero' around 2050." Debra Roberts, a Co-Chair, said "The next few years are probably the most important in our history." That includes, let's see, years like 1939 through 1945, for instance.
Like the Greatest Generation, we're at war again with a monster. Our 2018 version of 1940's B17 production lines need to spit out an arsenal of electric cars, and we need to start buying them like they're war bonds. As of October 8, the Hyundai Nexo and Kona Electric have shifted from dismissible novelty items to crucial solutions.Let me start with the Nexo.











