Skip to main content

Is that a Mars Rover? Nah, it’s Jaguar’s crazy concept for a car in 2040

Jaguar firmly believes the future of the automotive industry is electric, autonomous, connected, and shared. The British company is illustrating its vision of the future of mobility with a science fiction-esque concept car named Jaguar Future-Type. It’s a preview of what a compact luxury car could look like in about 2040.

The XE is Jaguar’s current compact luxury car, so the Future-Type marks a drastic departure from the accepted definition of what a car should — and shouldn’t — be in 2017. Almost none of the styling cues found on today’s cars are present on this design study. There is no hood, the radiator grille is gone, the windows are heavily tinted, the headlights are ultra-thin units integrated into the fenders, and the silhouette looks like it was penned by NASA for a mission to Mars. Jaguar design boss Ian Callum previously predicted electrification would revolutionize car design, and the Future-Type shows how it could happen.

The Future-Type is built around Sayer, an equally futuristic spoke-less steering wheel (pictured above) which relies on artificial intelligence to double as a personal assistant. The steering wheel is removable, and Jaguar predicts it’s the only part of the car motorists will own in a world where cars are shared by members of a community, not purchased by individuals. Sayer keeps track of the driver’s daily agenda, and it’s also used to select which type of information he or she is presented with at any given time. For example, users can tell it to stop showing work-related notifications after regular office hours.

Recommended Videos

Technical specifications haven’t been announced. All we know so far is that the Future-Type is electric, and it’s always fully charged. It’s entirely autonomous, but motorists can choose to take the wheel when they’re traveling on an enjoyable stretch of road. While Jaguar assures us cars in the long-term future will still be exhilarating to drive, a spokesperson told Digital Trends the company believes driving will become more of a novelty than a necessity.

Jaguar Future-Type concept

“Our vision for mobility in 2040 and beyond is demonstrated by Future-Type,” said Jaguar – Land Rover Ralf Septh during the first-ever JLR Tech Fest in London, England. He suggested the concept perfectly falls in line with the British government’s controversial plan to ban gasoline- and diesel-powered cars by the year 2040, but he stressed the infrastructure needs to catch up before vehicles like the Future-Type can become a reality.

Please enable Javascript to view this content

“We as a company can deliver electric vehicles,” he pointed out. “Where is the network of charging points that they will require to function? Indeed, where is the power grid that will allow us to build them?”

Ronan Glon
Ronan Glon is an American automotive and tech journalist based in southern France. As a long-time contributor to Digital…
Perseverance rover has problems collecting its first Mars sample
This image taken by NASA’s Perseverance rover on Aug. 6, 2021, shows the hole drilled in a Martian rock in preparation for the rover’s first attempt to collect a sample.

NASA had aimed to collect its first sample of Martian rock using the Perseverance rover yesterday, Friday, August 6, but the sampling attempt didn't go as planned. The rover failed to collect a rock sample and seal it into a tube for future analysis on Earth, but NASA officials say they're confident that they can figure out what went wrong.

Collecting samples from Mars is a major part of Perseverance's mission. The idea is that the rover will drill into the rocks in the Jezero crater area, where it is exploring, and collect a variety of samples. Each sample will be sealed in an airtight container called a sample tube. Then planned future missions to Mars will collect these samples and return them to Earth for study.

Read more
China’s Zhurong rover visits its parachute and backshell on Mars
China's Zhurong rover visits its parachute and backshell.

China's Zhurong rover visits its parachute and backshell on July 12. CNSA/PEC

China's Zhurong rover is exploring the surface of Mars and recently stopped by the site of its parachute and backshell. It snapped the picture above, which was shared by China's space agency, the China National Space Administration.

Read more
Watch the European Space Agency test its Mars rover parachute
ExoMars parachute deployed during high-altitude drop tests

ExoMars parachute high-altitude drop test

Despite what you might imagine, the trickiest part of sending a rover to Mars isn't the journey through space -- it's slowing down and landing once you arrive there. Mars's thin atmosphere makes slowing using a parachute difficult, which is why Mars missions are typically equipped with very large and high-tech parachutes to help rovers touch down gently on the red planet.

Read more