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Do we actually want the 2025 Toyota LandCruiser Prado Hybrid in Australia? Toyota isn't so sure...

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Toyota LandCruiser Prado
Andrew Chesterton
Contributing Journalist
12 Oct 2024
2 min read

The Toyota LandCruiser Prado Hybrid is no sure starter for Australia, with the company here uncertain the petrol-electric powertrain can survive our conditions and adventures.

That seems to be the rock and a hard place the Prado Hybrid – called the LandCruiser 250 in the USA – finds itself, with the punchy hybrid powertrain still wearing a question mark.

The powertrain in question is the i-Force Max hybrid, which pairs a 2.4-litre turbo-petrol engine with a 36kW electric motor integrated into an eight-speed transmission to pump out a total 243kW and 630Nm.

In fact, the hybrid powertrain outperforms our familiar 2.8-litre diesel in just about every metric, save two. The first is towing – in the USA, the hybrid allows for 2.7-tonne braked towing, less than the 3.5-tonne braked of the diesel-powered Prado.

The second, says Toyota, is the mystery of how the hybrid would handle Australia.

The brand says the New Vehicle Emissions Standard won't mean the end of Toyota's biggest bruisers, and it knows that electrification is coming, but it says the current-generation hybrid technology might not be the answer.

"I want to make it clear, there is no discussion in our organisation of stopping Prados or stopping LandCruisers or stopping HiLuxes," says Toyota Australia's VP of sales and marketing, Sean Hanley.

"I've often said that, by 2030, the vast majority of our models will have some form of electrification, except GR.

"It (the Prado Hybrid discussion) hasn't progressed. It's not that we don't have the capability, it's just a case of whether or not that particular hybrid engine would do the job that we want it to do in the Australian environment.

"Not just fuel saving, but off-road capability, towing capability, etc."

Andrew Chesterton
Contributing Journalist
Andrew Chesterton should probably hate cars. From his hail-damaged Camira that looked like it had spent a hard life parked at the end of Tiger Woods' personal driving range, to the Nissan Pulsar Reebok that shook like it was possessed by a particularly mean-spirited demon every time he dared push past 40km/h, his personal car history isn't exactly littered with gold. But that seemingly endless procession of rust-savaged hate machines taught him something even more important; that cars are more than a collection of nuts, bolts and petrol. They're your ticket to freedom, a way to unlock incredible experiences, rolling invitations to incredible adventures. They have soul. And so, somehow, the car bug still bit. And it bit hard. When "Chesto" started his journalism career with News Ltd's Sunday and Daily Telegraph newspapers, he covered just about everything, from business to real estate, courts to crime, before settling into state political reporting at NSW Parliament House. But the automotive world's siren song soon sounded again, and he begged anyone who would listen for the opportunity to write about cars. Eventually they listened, and his career since has seen him filing car news, reviews and features for TopGear, Wheels, Motor and, of course, CarsGuide, as well as many, many others. More than a decade later, and the car bug is yet to relinquish its toothy grip. And if you ask Chesto, he thinks it never will.
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