Hyundai Motor Co. will double its hybrid vehicle lineup to 14 models and develop longer-range electric vehicles to overome a prolonged EV chasm, or a slowdown in EV demand, said its Chief Executive Chang Jae-hoon on Wednesday. To bolster the hybrid car lineup and develop advanced EV powertrains, the South Korean carmaker will spend 92.

7 trillion won ($69 billion) in the sectors through 2034. That represents 77% of its investment of 120.5 trillion won earmarked for the next decade, compared with its of 109.

4 trillion won unveiled last year. South Korea's largest carmaker, a sibling of Kia Corp., will roll out hybrid variants for 14 models, including subcompact, full-size cars and luxury models.

Currently, it applies hybrid engines to seven models, primarily subcomact and mid-sized ones. In February, The Korea Economic Daily exclusively reported that Hyundai would likely release in 2025, including its popular models of the G80 sedan and the GV70 SUV. Hyundai's hybrid cars, to be mass-produced from next year, will fit in with the next-generation hybrid systems (TMED-II), Chang said at the company’s 2024 CEO Investor Day forum on Wednesday.

TMED is Hyundai's proprietry technology. Its secong-generation model significantly improves the performance and fuel efficiency than its predecessor (TMED), but costs as much as that for the preceding one. To boost its hybrid car output, it will to manufacture hybrid cars to meet the demand in the US once it comes online in the fourth quarte.