|
SEAT is among those leading the
field when it comes to producing
quick, slick cars capable of
delivering that most rare of
motoring commodities: the
genuinely exciting, genuinely
‘greener’ driving experience.
With diesel now taking upwards
of 40% of the new car market,
the Spanish manufacturer’s
selection of sporty TDI-engined
models is at the forefront of
the shift towards the black
pumps.
The so-called ‘drive for diesel’
– well documented by the Society
of Motor Manufacturers and
Traders – is now delivering
virtually one million new
registrations a year, and the
trend towards oil burners is
continuing to gather pace.
The successful Spanish car
maker, which in the last year
notched up near-record sales of
almost 35,000 cars here and has
just celebrated the construction
of its 16 millionth vehicle, is
ideally placed to help fuel this
shift thanks to its fast, frugal
Ibiza FR TDI, Leon FR TDI and
Altea FR TDI.
The three – all neatly
characterised best as hot
hatches with a conscience –
wring every ounce of mph, and
mpg, from their turbocharged,
direct injection powerplants.
The Ibiza, for instance, offers
130 PS from its four cylinder
turbodiesel: enough power for a
sub-ten second 0 to 62 mph time
(9.3 seconds, to be precise) but
also enough economy to offer
54.3 mpg on the combined cycle.
All this, yet CO2
emissions are just 139 g/km.
The Leon, meanwhile, is even
more sporty – 170 PS, 0 to 62
mph in 8.2 seconds and a top
speed of 135 mph – but with 47.1
mpg on the combined cycle and an
official CO2 rating
of only 161 g/km it’s also
undeniably ‘green’ for a fully
fledged hot hatch.
No
wonder, then, that of the
4,000-plus Leon FRs registered
in 2007 an amazing 71% (2,916
cars) were specified with the
potent 2.0-litre TDI engine.
A
spokesman for the SMMT said:
‘2007 saw fuel-efficient diesel
models take a record share of
the UK new car market – nearly
one million vehicles. Consider
this against the fact that, in
1998, diesel cars accounted for
just 15.3% of new car
registrations in the UK and it’s
clear that the drive for diesel
is a very real phenomenon.
‘Modern diesel engines
are sophisticated power units
and vastly improved on those of
even ten years ago – most
notably they are cleaner and
quieter. A key reason for the
improvement we have seen in
average new car CO2
performance has been the growth
of sales of diesel-engined
cars.’
He
added: ‘Diesels are typically
ten to 20% lower CO2-emitters
than petrol equivalent models.’
And let’s not forget that those
looking for the very cleanest,
greenest, diesels should also be
looking to SEAT.
Industry-leading new offering
the Ibiza Ecomotive – with up to
88.3 mpg, just 99 g/km of CO2
and on sale now from £10,995
RRP – will be joined in the
summer by the similarly green
Leon Ecomotive which offers up
to 76.3 mpg and CO2
of only 119 g/km.
‘Performance diesels like those
in the FR range, which nimbly
balance the need for improved
mpg with GTI-style power, really
are the best of all worlds.’
|