China’s GWM sensationally revealed a new twin-turbo V8 petrol engine last year at the Shanghai motor show, and the brand’s local operating chief is still very keen to try and find a place for the big-block unit Down Under.

Speaking with media, GWM Australia chief operating officer John Kett said the company would “love” to make the V8 a reality in Australia, though finding where it fits in is a challenge given pressure from the Federal Government’s New Vehicle Efficiency Standard (NVES).

“We’d love to turn that V8 we spoke about last year into something. We’ve certainly got visibility around [ICE-only] V8, I’m not sure we can pay the NVES penalty, but we want to think about that too and how it would work,” Mr Kett said.

“We don’t have anything more on our plug-in hybrid V8, but it’s still there [on the radar], and we get a chance at this [Beijing motor show] to go back to Baoding and see where we are in that regard.”

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Asked if such a powertrain would force the company to do strictly limited volume, or even a ballot system like some automakers do in heavily regulated markets, Mr Kett replied: “We’d like to be a bit broader than that”.

“I think for our whole portfolio, we’ll sit on the edge of NVES [penalties]… So maybe [the V8 customer] has to pay the tax that goes with that.

“Economically that makes sense, but I’m not sure PR-wise or corporate-wise, whether they would like that.”

Further to Mr Kett’s comments, GWM’s head of marketing and communications, Steve Maciver, added: “If we can build a business case and there’s demand there, we’ll sell as many as we can.”

The availability of a turbocharged V8 petrol engine would give GWM a big point of difference in the attainable end of the market, given eight-cylinder engines these days are generally the realm of boutique and luxury brands apart from a handful of models like the Ford Mustang and outgoing Nissan Patrol.