If you’re hoping to make it big in new car sales these days then it's best to think compact, as in ‘compact crossovers’. These machines that aim to mix family hatch practicality and running costs with just a sprinkling of SUV street cred are big business, which is why manufacturers, mainstream and premium alike, have jumped into the sector with both feet. Peugeot was one of the first with its original 2008 in 2013, which was replaced by the current car six years later.
It sits on Peugeot’s CMP (Common Modular Platform) small car architecture which, you may know, means it comes with a choice of internal combustion power or as a pure battery-electric vehicle (BEV) - the e-2008, which we look at in more detail here. Plug-in hybridisation is saved for bigger Peugeots and Citroëns, DSs and Vauxhalls that with Peugeot form the Stellantis automotive super group.
Anyway, the idea is that, instead of Peugeot making a stand-alone electric vehicle, you choose a car from the regular Peugeot range and then choose a powertrain - ‘thermal’ or electric - to suit you, which strikes me as a pragmatic long-term approach. Like most big car companies, Peugeot needs a mix of low- or zero-tailpipe-emission vehicles to meet legislated CO2 targets. Its current order bank suggests it’ll meet them comfortably.
The latest 2008 joins a raft of compact crossovers and, at this size and price, is pitched against rather a lot of family hatchbacks too. Other crossovers have not exactly set a high bar, but the best small family hatchbacks are really rather good, meaning the pugnacious Peugeot has its work cut out.
In the UK, most 2008s will be powered by a PureTech 1.2-litre turbocharged three-cylinder petrol engine that comes in 99bhp (six-speed manual only), 128bhp (manual or eight-speed automatic) and, on the top flight GT Premium, 153bhp (auto only) flavours. The 134bhp electric version will make up a double-digit percentage of sales, considerably more than the 108bhp manual-only 1.5-lire BlueHDi diesel, which thanks to the fallout from Volkswagen’s diesel cheating will likely make up just one 2008 in every 20. You can try to make a good case for a clean modern diesel, but as former Peugeot CEO Jean-Philippe Imparato once told us, “nobody’s listening”.
Prices for combusted 2008s start at just over £21,000 and rise to £31,000, with electric variants weighing in at up to £38,000, though lower servicing and refuelling costs on the BEV are meant to keep overall ownership costs equivalent to a 129bhp petrol.