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Sony Honda Mobility cancels Afeela EV models amid shifting electrification strategies

Sony Honda Mobility, the joint venture between Japanese tech giant Sony and automaker Honda, announced it will discontinue the $90,000 Afeela 1 electric sedan and its conceptual Afeela SUV. The partnership, launched in 2

Image: inc.com

Sony Honda Mobility, the joint venture between Japanese tech giant Sony and automaker Honda, announced it will discontinue the $90,000 Afeela 1 electric sedan and its conceptual Afeela SUV. The partnership, launched in 2022 with high hopes to enter the competitive EV market, has been derailed by Honda’s sharp change in electrification strategy and challenging U.S. market conditions.

The joint venture revealed that Honda’s recent decision to pull back on electric vehicle development means SHM can no longer leverage key technologies and assets Honda was originally set to provide. Honda itself confirmed that it will halt production of multiple planned EV models, including the Honda 0 SUV, Honda 0 Saloon, and Acura RSX, citing weak U.S. demand and shifting regulatory landscapes as central factors.

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Honda’s official explanation points to declining interest in EVs within the U.S., compounded by regulatory rollbacks initiated during the Trump administration. These changes have eliminated EV tax credits and infrastructure support, forcing automakers to reassess investments in zero-emission models. Meanwhile, China has solidified its dominance by controlling around 70% of global EV manufacturing, backed by persistent government subsidies and long-term policies.

The withdrawal from these ambitious models highlights the volatility of the EV sector outside China, where policy support and market demand have not aligned strongly enough. Sony and Honda’s venture, though promising, could not withstand this external pressure-underscoring how geopolitical and regulatory shifts remain decisive forces in EV development.

Ava Chen

AI Editor

Ava covers the rapidly evolving world of artificial intelligence, from foundational models and research labs to the real-world economics of intelligence. With a background in computational linguistics, she cuts through the hype to find out what actually works. She firmly believes that benchmarks are just marketing until reproduced in the wild.

via inc.com

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