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“Sooner or later the Urus will be going to electric,” Lamborghini’s design chief Mitja Borkert told Drive – before walking it back.


It’s unlikely the current generation of Lamborghini’s first SUV will be offered with zero-emission power, however a replacement due sometime after 2028 may ditch internal combustion entirely.  

“[Electric cars are] the future, be we have to decide when, in which market, and in the segments it makes sense,” Mr Borkert revealed during a media event.



“Our interpretation is that probably the more versatile and daily use cars such as the Urus – for sure, they will be the first fully electrified compared to the pure super sport cars.”

“Sooner or later the Urus will be going to electric … to be honest, the regulations in the world and also the social acceptance – the trend is going in this way for sure.”



However, he subsequently walked the claim back: “I’m not saying right now that the Urus successor is going electric, but for these kinds of cars electrification makes more sense.”

This allows the benchmark 0-100km/h sprint to be completed in a claimed 3.6 seconds, on the way to a top speed of approximately 305km/h.



An electric successor would likely be quicker again; the Tesla Model X Plaid completes the same dash in a claimed 2.6 seconds, on the way to a top speed of 262km/h.

“In terms of design, it has to be a GT but a very modern approach on a GT car, and it should have … also the safety feeling and the peace of mind feeling what a car with a higher ground clearance has,” Mr Winkelmann said.



“This is the idea we are going to have, or we are having, with the difference between this car and Urus, which is … a four door car.”

“People at the moment are still trained that V10 is emotional, but I don’t know if in forty years the young kids will still be happy with this.



“At the moment I haven’t found [an electric] model on the market where I say it is fit to a Lamborghini request … but we have ideas.

“I’m also someone who is in love with the combustion engine, but I’m not fearing the move to electric.”

William Davis

William Davis has written for Drive since July 2020, covering news and current affairs in the automotive industry.

He has maintained a primary focus on industry trends, autonomous technology, electric vehicle regulations, and local environmental policy.

As the newest addition to the Drive team, William was brought onboard for his attention to detail, writing skills, and strong work ethic.

Despite writing for a diverse range of outlets – including the Australian Financial Review, Robb Report, and Property Observer – since completing his media degree at Macquarie University, William has always had a passion for cars.

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