EV News

Hyundai and Kia cars may be powered by solar roof tech by 2019

Published by
Bridie Schmidt

South Korean carmakers Hyundai Motor and Kia Motors are going one better than creating an EV charging network powered by solar energy – they want their cars to capture their own energy, via solar roof technology – and as soon as next year.

There will be three types of solar cells applied to vehicles made by the South Korean carmakers, the first which could recharge a car’s battery by up to 30 to 60 per cent each day, potentially adding range without a stop at a charging station.

A second-gen semi-transparent system is also being launched, that would act as a “sun roof” – in more ways than one – and also a third-gen version that can be applied to the car bodies.

The plans announced this week will see the solar charging technology introduced into certain models – and not just for the obvious recipients, electric vehicles.

The solar panels would be compatible with not only hybrid and electric vehicles but also pure internal combustion cars, Hyundai stated in a press release.

Developed to support increased energy needs of autonomous technology, the solar charging technology would also assist in reducing CO2 emissions associated with EV chargers using electricity from a grid dominated by coal (such as Australia’s).

Jeong-Gil Park, executive vice president of engineering design at Hyundai says the technology will elevate the role of the EV driver from just another consumer of centrally generated power.

“This will enable them to develop from a passive device that consumes energy to a solution that actively generates energy. The paradigm of the vehicle owner will shift from that of a consumer to an energy prosumer,” Park said in a statement.

Although Hyundai Australia could not comment on a timeline for availability in Australia, a spokesperson said that the technology will become increasingly relevant as light vehicle emissions regulations are developed.

“[It’s a] great feature and will obviously work well in Australia given our abundance of sunlight!”

Recent Posts

Hyundai unveils Chinese EV strategy with launch of new electric SUV also bound for Australia

South Korean carmaker Hyundai has unveiled its latest new energy vehicle (NEV) strategy for China,…

4 November 2025

Video: Zeekr X review – Features, and unexpected challenges

With standout features, solid battery specs, and a few unexpected challenges, this review covers everything…

4 November 2025

Tesla sales slump in October as Model 3 numbers hit lowest level in years

Tesla sales slump in October, with a sharp fall in the Model 3 sedan offsetting…

4 November 2025

Australian electric vehicle sales by month in 2025 – by model and by brand

A full breakdown of all electric vehicle sales by month in Australia in 2025. Latest…

4 November 2025

Tesla to add more than 1,000 cars to its Robotaxi fleet

Tesla to massively expand its Robotaxi fleet to more than 1,500 operating cars across two…

4 November 2025

More than 170 electric buses to roll out across NZ’s largest city over next 9 months

More than 170 electric buses are set to roll out across New Zealand’s largest city…

3 November 2025