Aliza Savira
Aliza Savira covers automobiles for MSN with a clear focus on how electric vehicle technology and efficiency are reshaping the small-car segment. She uses new EV concepts to frame broader shifts in the way manufacturers compete, treating efficiency not as background detail but as a central battleground in automotive design. Her coverage sits at the intersection of engineering choices, market positioning, and the practical realities of everyday driving.
Electric efficiency as a battleground
In her coverage of Shell’s Triple10 small-EV concept, Savira presents efficiency as the next major front in competition between compact electric vehicles rather than focusing only on performance or styling. She treats energy use, range and packaging as the core story, showing how incremental gains in efficiency can define whether a small EV is viable and attractive. By framing efficiency as a strategic weapon for manufacturers, she moves beyond a simple description of features and into how engineering priorities drive market outcomes.
This approach gives her work a strong analytical thread. She does not treat efficiency as a technical footnote; instead, she writes as though it is the lens through which small-EV design decisions should be understood. The result is coverage that explains why a concept like Triple10 matters in the competitive landscape, not just what it looks like or how it performs.
Concept cars as signals of future trends
Savira uses concept vehicles as a way to talk about where the automobile industry is heading, especially in the compact EV class. Rather than treating a concept car as a one-off showpiece, she reads it as a signal of future priorities in engineering, packaging and energy use. Her work links individual projects to broader patterns in small-EV development, such as the push to squeeze more usable range, comfort and safety out of minimal footprints.
This future-facing stance distinguishes her coverage from more transactional reporting on launches and model updates. By choosing concept projects as her entry point, she can explore ideas before they reach mass production and show how automakers experiment with new layouts, materials and efficiency strategies. That makes her writing useful for readers who follow long-term trends in automotive technology rather than only near-term buying decisions.
Technical detail in accessible terms
Within the automobile beat, Savira writes in a way that keeps technical themes accessible to a general audience. She explains efficiency and design trade-offs in plain language, connecting engineering concerns with everyday use cases like urban driving, charging expectations and ownership costs. Her focus on compact EVs and their efficiency pressures gives her a concrete frame for translating technical developments into practical implications.
Taken together, her work presents small electric vehicles as a live competitive field defined by efficiency, innovation and thoughtful design, rather than as niche curiosities. She occupies a space between enthusiast writing and industry analysis, showing how changes in EV technology play out in the kinds of cars people might realistically drive next.
4 more automobile journalists.
Abhirup Roy
Abhirup Roy is distinct for his data-driven coverage of the U.S. auto industry, especially how electric-vehicle makers, suppliers and retailers respond to shifting demand, prices and regulation. He is a U.S. autos correspondent at Reuters News, with work widely carried by Yahoo Finance and other business outlets. He focuses on electric vehicles, autonomous cars and auto retail, using hard numbers on sales, deliveries, market share and tariffs to show how automakers navigate volatile markets and policy. His reporting tracks Tesla and newer EV manufacturers, links production and revenue results to investor expectations and stock moves, and explains how trade barriers, supply chains and new business models shape strategy. He covers autonomous and advanced driver-assistance technology as a near-term safety, liability and regulatory issue, grounding stories in concrete decisions and measurable outcomes.
Alana Cameron
Alana Cameron’s most distinctive work explains the legal and safety framework around emerging transportation, especially e‑bikes, in clear, rule‑based detail. She reports and anchors for Quinte News, focusing on how everyday transportation, policing and local regulation shape life in her coverage area. Within the automobile beat she concentrates on practical safety rules, enforcement activity and how official guidance translates into day‑to‑day decisions for drivers, cyclists and e‑bike riders. Her e‑bike coverage breaks down Highway Traffic Act requirements, equipment standards and operational rules into a practical checklist. She also reports on crime, courts, police briefings, public safety alerts and missing‑person cases, as well as community initiatives, conservation and fundraising efforts. Her stories are tightly structured, instructional and grounded in direct sourcing from police and public agencies, reflecting a background in local radio, television, specialized weather and a firefighting industry publication.
Alex Allan
Alex Allan is an award-winning multimedia journalist at Your Sunset Country whose key distinction is anchoring transport and automotive coverage inside national economic and policy stories. He works an automobile beat within a wider focus on economics, federal policy and transportation news, concentrating on fuel prices, transportation labour disputes and major fiscal and regulatory decisions that shape mobility. He reports on fuel prices, inflation and the cost of driving, federal budgets and deficits, clean energy and emissions policy, trade deals and regulatory changes, transportation labour disputes, national programs, elections, criminal justice reform, language policy and conservation. Across these subjects he links everyday costs, drivers, travellers and logistics to inflation data, fiscal plans, trade rules and institutional reforms, using detailed reporting on numbers, agreements and programs to show how people and goods move.
Amy Judd
Amy Judd is an award-winning journalist and online supervisor at Global BC, known for short, disciplined digital stories that connect public policy, science and everyday life. She has worked at the station since 2011 and has earned multiple RTDNA and Webster Awards for clear, accessible online coverage. Her reporting focuses on how technology shapes risks for children, legal and policy debates around inclusive education, and practical digital safety guidance for families. She also explains scientific research for general audiences, covers provincial drug policy, wildlife management, traffic enforcement and corporate moves tied to politics and resource industries. As online supervisor, she collaborates across the newsroom to extend and deepen broadcast reporting, building concise, high-impact articles around expert voices, official documents and concrete evidence of how decisions affect people’s lives.