This Xiaomi-Backed Electric Stratos Is Coming To Europe

- Chinese SC-01 will be built in Italy, sold across Europe, report says.
- Europe scheduled to get 1,000 cars; debut takes place January 24.
- Bi-motor, AWD two-seater gives 429 hp, 0-62 mph in 2.9 sec.
Electric sports cars are finally happening in a big way, but Europe might not be waiting for Porsche or Alpine to lead the charge. A small Chinese brand you have probably never heard of wants in on the action, and it looks like a far more serious enthusiast proposition than the MG Cyberster.
More: Chinese Sports Car Looks Like A Tesla Roadster Hooked Up With A Lancia
The car is the SC-01, a lightweight electric sports coupe that’s not just headed to Europe, as the company itself has confirmed, but also set to be built there, according to Chinese media. Backed by Xiaomi and Jiangling’s JMEV brand, around 1,000 of these compact two-seaters are expected to be produced in Italy.
Visually, the SC-01 leans hard into classic wedge territory. Think Lancia Stratos proportions filtered through a modern EV lens, with compact dimensions and proper sports car stance.
At 4106 mm (161.7 inches) long it’s a smidge shorter than an Alpine A110 and around 270 mm (10.6 inches) more compact than the recently axed ICE Porsche 718 Cayman. The real headline, though, is the weight.
Hardcore Diet
At 1,365 kg (3,009 lbs) the aluminium SC-01 is astonishingly light for an EV – 520 kg (1,150 lbs) lighter than a RWD MG Cyberster and 620 kg (1,370 lbs) down on MG’s AWD variant.
The Cyberster already seemed more like a mini Mercedes SL than a hardcore sports car, and those numbers, plus the SC-01’s front and rear pushrod suspension only underline the impression.
Power comes from dual electric motors producing a combined 429 bhp (434 PS / 320 kW), enough to launch the SC-01 to 62 mph (100 kmh) in a claimed 2.9 seconds.
A 60 kWh battery gives the car a quoted 311-mile (500 km) range on the optimistic CLTC cycle, so reckon on more like 270 WLPT miles (435 km) and even less if you’re driving it like you’re supposed to.
Minimal Screen Tech
Inside, the SC-01 might surprise you even more. There’s no massive touchscreen wall of the kind you might expect from a modern Chinese EV. Instead you get a single driver display and physical climate controls.
In other words, it feels like someone built it for people who actually enjoy driving, and plan to be driving too hard to spend precious moments hunting for a switch on a digital display.
How Much will it Cost?
Exact Euro prices and an on-sale date are still TBC, but according to Car News China, the car may launch at around 500,000 yuan, which comes to around $72,000, €61,000, or £53,000. That’s a significant step up from its domestic Chinese price of 229,800 yuan, or roughly $33,000 / €28,500 at current exchange rates.
Still, that would put it at a competitive advantage to the new generation of electric sports cars from Porsche, Alpine, and Lotus, some of which are still years away, and are sure to cost more.


















