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Society & CultureSaturday, July 4, 2026

A Tale of Two Blazers: How the Global SUV Outgrew Its Rough Edges

A crash test between a 1996 and a 2026 Chevrolet Blazer lays bare a transformation that extends far beyond safety, as new launches from Brazil to India reveal an SUV segment redefining luxury, power, and electrification.

In a controlled crash hall in Virginia, two Chevrolet Blazers were sent hurtling towards one another. One was a 1996 model, its steel body a familiar relic of an era when airbags were a luxury and electronic stability control a novelty. The other was its 2026 descendant, a rolling fortress of high-strength steel and sensor arrays. When the two met, the older vehicle’s cabin crumpled inward, its dummy occupant subjected to forces that would have been catastrophic. The newer Blazer’s passenger cell remained intact, its airbags blooming in a choreographed sequence. The Insurance Institute for Highway Safety, which staged the test, described the result as overwhelming.

That collision, a deliberate anachronism, captures a truth that extends well beyond American crash-test protocols. Across continents, the sport utility vehicle is undergoing a metamorphosis that is as much about cultural aspiration as it is about kilowatt-hours and torque figures. In Brazil, Toyota has just given the Corolla Cross a GR Sport makeover for the 2027 model year, grafting on a more aggressive front bumper, a blacked-out grille, and metallic pedals while leaving the 175-horsepower flex-fuel engine untouched. The message, viewed from São Paulo, is that visual identity now matters as much as mechanical specification in a segment crowded with Chinese challengers.

In India, the new Hilux arrives this month with a cabin inspired by the Land Cruiser Prado and, for the first time, electric power steering. It will be sold exclusively with a diesel engine—a decision that, according to industry analysts in Mumbai, signals Toyota’s reading of a market where the lifestyle pickup buyer remains wary of full electrification. Meanwhile, in Indonesia, Changan is taking a different path. Its Deepal S05, a tech-sporty SUV with a yacht-inspired interior, becomes the first model in the country to offer both a pure battery-electric option and a range-extender variant that uses a petrol engine solely as a generator. The company’s local CEO frames the dual approach as a bridge for consumers not yet ready to abandon the internal combustion engine entirely.

At the opposite end of the spectrum, Lamborghini’s new Urus SE Performante hybrid pushes the SUV into supercar territory. Its twin-turbo V8 and electric motor deliver 812 horsepower, enough to reach 100 km/h in 3.3 seconds, while a 25.9 kWh battery allows over 60 kilometres of silent, emission-free driving. Carbon-fibre body panels and a titanium exhaust shave 32 kilograms off the weight of the standard hybrid Urus, and a dedicated Rally mode invites drivers to explore dirt roads. In Argentina, where the RAV4 plug-in hybrid has just arrived with 329 horsepower and a claimed electric range of 142 kilometres, the SUV’s transformation is quieter but no less telling: a family hauler that can cover most daily commutes without burning a drop of fuel, yet still cross a continent on a single tank.

These vehicles, from the diesel Hilux to the electrified RAV4 and the raging Urus, are no longer merely tools for rough terrain or suburban school runs. They have become canvases for personal identity, technological showcases, and, increasingly, statements about how different societies imagine the future of mobility. Back in the Virginia crash hall, the two Blazers sit side by side after the test—one a mangled artefact of a less demanding age, the other a survivor. The gap between them is measured not just in decades of engineering, but in a widening set of expectations that the global SUV now carries on its broad shoulders.

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5 outlets|5 languages|3 min read
Saturday, July 4, 2026

A Tale of Two Blazers: How the Global SUV Outgrew Its Rough Edges

A crash test between a 1996 and a 2026 Chevrolet Blazer lays bare a transformation that extends far beyond safety, as new launches from Brazil to India reveal an SUV segment redefining luxury, power, and electrification.

In a controlled crash hall in Virginia, two Chevrolet Blazers were sent hurtling towards one another. One was a 1996 model, its steel body a familiar relic of an era when airbags were a luxury and electronic stability control a novelty. The other was its 2026 descendant, a rolling fortress of high-strength steel and sensor arrays. When the two met, the older vehicle’s cabin crumpled inward, its dummy occupant subjected to forces that would have been catastrophic. The newer Blazer’s passenger cell remained intact, its airbags blooming in a choreographed sequence. The Insurance Institute for Highway Safety, which staged the test, described the result as overwhelming.

That collision, a deliberate anachronism, captures a truth that extends well beyond American crash-test protocols. Across continents, the sport utility vehicle is undergoing a metamorphosis that is as much about cultural aspiration as it is about kilowatt-hours and torque figures. In Brazil, Toyota has just given the Corolla Cross a GR Sport makeover for the 2027 model year, grafting on a more aggressive front bumper, a blacked-out grille, and metallic pedals while leaving the 175-horsepower flex-fuel engine untouched. The message, viewed from São Paulo, is that visual identity now matters as much as mechanical specification in a segment crowded with Chinese challengers.

In India, the new Hilux arrives this month with a cabin inspired by the Land Cruiser Prado and, for the first time, electric power steering. It will be sold exclusively with a diesel engine—a decision that, according to industry analysts in Mumbai, signals Toyota’s reading of a market where the lifestyle pickup buyer remains wary of full electrification. Meanwhile, in Indonesia, Changan is taking a different path. Its Deepal S05, a tech-sporty SUV with a yacht-inspired interior, becomes the first model in the country to offer both a pure battery-electric option and a range-extender variant that uses a petrol engine solely as a generator. The company’s local CEO frames the dual approach as a bridge for consumers not yet ready to abandon the internal combustion engine entirely.

At the opposite end of the spectrum, Lamborghini’s new Urus SE Performante hybrid pushes the SUV into supercar territory. Its twin-turbo V8 and electric motor deliver 812 horsepower, enough to reach 100 km/h in 3.3 seconds, while a 25.9 kWh battery allows over 60 kilometres of silent, emission-free driving. Carbon-fibre body panels and a titanium exhaust shave 32 kilograms off the weight of the standard hybrid Urus, and a dedicated Rally mode invites drivers to explore dirt roads. In Argentina, where the RAV4 plug-in hybrid has just arrived with 329 horsepower and a claimed electric range of 142 kilometres, the SUV’s transformation is quieter but no less telling: a family hauler that can cover most daily commutes without burning a drop of fuel, yet still cross a continent on a single tank.

These vehicles, from the diesel Hilux to the electrified RAV4 and the raging Urus, are no longer merely tools for rough terrain or suburban school runs. They have become canvases for personal identity, technological showcases, and, increasingly, statements about how different societies imagine the future of mobility. Back in the Virginia crash hall, the two Blazers sit side by side after the test—one a mangled artefact of a less demanding age, the other a survivor. The gap between them is measured not just in decades of engineering, but in a widening set of expectations that the global SUV now carries on its broad shoulders.

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