We’re just weeks away from the unveiling of Porsche’s Taycan electric super-saloon, Aston Martin’s new Rapide E packs over 600bhp, and even Tesla’s cheapest car can accelerate faster than your average Ferrari.

The electrification era is upon us, and it’s the duty of whisper-quiet luxury cruisers and mind-bendingly quick performance saloons to convince us to abandon conventional fuels. 

So you might think that Mercedessecond electric production passenger vehicle, the EQV, is neither as scene-stealing, nor as important, as some of the cars mentioned above. It is, after all, a van-based MPV, and most likely to be seen ferrying people to or from an airport.

Mercedes-Benz EQV is 252-mile range premium electric MPV

But where electric sports cars will build interest from the masses for zero-emissions transport, it will fall to everyday stalwarts like the new EQV to actually enact a change at ground level. You have only to gaze upon the endless rows of conventionally fuelled Mercedes-Benz V-Class, Sprinter and Vito models parked outside airport departure halls worldwide, to gain a sense of the potential of the EQV. 

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With a range of 252 miles, flexible seating and quick-charging capabilities, the EQV is a taxi driver’s dream. It’s feasible that the new EV could capably emulate the daily routine of its V-Class forebear; 500 miles in a day sounds reasonable, and lunch breaks would allow enough time to prepare the battery pack for an afternoon’s tour of the M25 (where regenerative braking, as anyone who uses the route will testify, will be used to full effect). 

Benjamin Kaehler, head of Mercedes-Benz Vans' eDrive initiative, says the EQV is ready to take over immediately from its conventionally fuelled counterparts. He said: “The taxi drivers we’ve spoken to do roughly between 250-300km (155-186 miles) per day and some of them do more, but then they have to take a lunch break anyway.