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Citroën ë-C3 review: The cheap electric car we've been waiting for

Citroën ë-C3 review: The cheap electric car we've been waiting for

Telegraph6 days ago
You have to feel for the Citroën ë-C3. There it was, set to grab a fat slice of the burgeoning market for small electric cars. Then along came the Renault 5 – almost identically priced, technically brilliant, as well as charmingly styled as a perfect retro homage to a car so quintessentially French it was a surprise not to find a boot-mounted onion holder on the options list.
Where does that leave the ë-C3? Up a creek without a paddle, you might think. But there is still plenty to love about Citroën's small EV. For one thing, you might prefer the fact it looks forward, rather than back. It's chic and modern, rather than a retro pastiche, which might be more to your liking.
For another, it's technically an SUV, its boxier profile making it more practical than the 5. And what with Citroën getting its mojo back recently, the ë-C3 should drive pretty well, too. So is this small, affordable EV worthy of consideration?
Pros
Comfortable ride
Smart interior
Low price
Cons
Not fast
Boot could be bigger
Shame about the Renault 5
Priced out
Until recently, the ë-C3 had price on its side, too. At a shade over £21,000, it represented a saving of almost £2,000 over the entry-level 5. But more recently Citroën raised the price of the entry-level Plus model, narrowing the difference to £900. (The top-spec Max model tested here is a further £1,700.)
That may still be enough to sway you, particularly given the ë-C3 will charge faster, zipping from 10 to 80 per cent in only 26 minutes, according to Citroën. However, the EVDatabase website, fast becoming the Bible for EV facts and figures, reckon it will take longer; in fact, at 32 minutes, it matches the 5's time exactly.
The ë-C3's 44kWh of usable battery capacity will get it marginally further on a charge at 199 miles (to the 40kWh Renault's 192), but while the Renault has a heat pump as standard the Citroën doesn't.
That said, the ë-C3's lithium iron phosphate (LFP) battery technology performs marginally better in colder weather, which may help make up the difference. Either way, you can expect a range of about 150 miles in the real world, with the usual caveats relating to variations in temperature (significantly less range in the coldest weather).
There are other rivals to the ë-C3, of course, though the price for entry tends to be higher. From China, GWM's Ora 03 Pure will do 193 miles (officially) and costs a fiver shy of £25,000. The BYD Dolphin is capable of 211 miles, but is just over £26,000.
From Europe, the Mini Cooper Electric costs almost £27,000 yet only provides 185 miles of range. The £25,000-odd that Fiat charges for a 500e, meanwhile – which will only do 118 miles on a full charge – sounds by comparison like a rip-off.
Almost perfect
So the ë-C3 undercuts its supposedly more affordable Chinese competitors yet also looks a bargain next to its trendier rivals. Indeed, Renault 5 apart, the ë-C3 would have the playing field at this price point all to itself – and would look like tremendous value as a result.
But there's a difference between 'good value' and 'cheap'. Early signs are promising. Climb aboard – the ë-C3's SUV profile means the seats are slightly higher off the ground than its conventional hatchback rivals', which makes access easier – and you're greeted with an unusual stacked dashboard, which incorporates full-width accent lighting, two enormous shelves and a central tablet-style touchscreen.
The driver's main instrumentation takes the form of a simple black-and-white digital binnacle atop the dash that presents all the information you need crisply and clearly.
There are physical buttons on the steering wheel and a proper climate control panel with some neat piano key toggles to adjust the temperature, so you don't have to use the touchscreen to do so.
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