Mazda MX-30 small crossover coming as EV and PHEV

Mazda confirmed its MX-30 small crossover will come to the U.S. in two different forms: an electric vehicle, or a plug-in hybrid with a rotary engine. 

Mazda hasn’t released many details, but the rear-hinged rear doors and sloped roofline give it an almost fastback shape up top, while the lower half wears prodigious black cladding somewhere between a Subaru Crosstrek and a Pontiac Aztek. 

It’s unclear how the MX-30 concept introduced late in 2019 will fit into Mazda’s current lineup of crossover SUVs. It’s the same length as the Mazda CX-30 that launched for 2020. That small crossover is larger than the CX-3, which is more like a hatchback than a crossover and has been pared down to one trim level. It likely won’t be around for 2022. 

Another curiosity is the use of a rotary engine as part of the plug-in hybrid powertrain. Mazda last used a rotary engine a decade ago on the RX-8 sports car. Rotary engines are known for their simplicity and lighter weight in terms of fewer moving parts than a piston-cylinder combustion engine, but they’re not very efficient.  

The rotary engine used in Japan for the MX-30 is a range extender, according to Green Car Reports, so in the U.S. too it will likely serve as more of a backup generator to power the electric motor rather than as a propulsion source. In Japan and Europe, the MX-30 uses a 35.5-kwh battery pack and has a range of only 124 miles on the WLTP standard.

It would be the first electric and plug-in hybrid Mazda sells in the U.S.