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The new Toyota GR Supra Racing Concept is displayed at the 88th Geneva International Motor Show on March 6, 2018 in Geneva.Robert Hradil

The Supra is back, and it's more than a halo car for Toyota Motor Corp. It's a statement of intent.

President Akio Toyoda is resurrecting Toyota's most iconic sports car after a 16-year break to get customers excited about gripping a steering wheel at a time when the industry races toward self-driving cars. Six years in development, Asia's biggest auto maker finally unveiled the concept coupe at the Geneva Auto Show on Tuesday. Sales are set to start in the first half of 2019, a Toyota spokeswoman said.

As trends toward autonomous driving, electrification and vehicle-sharing threaten to turn cars into little more than utilitarian people-movers, Toyota is using more exciting products such as the Supra for competitive edge. The challenge for the Japanese giant, known for affordable cars that keep their value, is to win over shoppers also looking for power and speed, said Tim Urquhart, an analyst with IHS Automotive in London.

"The last Supra was a bit of a performance icon in its own right – but that was 20 years ago," Urquhart said. "So the question now is whether the market is hugely receptive to a very fast, nimble, sporty Toyota."

Pop Icon Though pricing is yet to be revealed, the new Supra could start at US$50,000, according to Forbes. That puts it in direct competition with cars such as the Chevrolet Corvette and Mercedes SLC Roadster. The Supra will sit above the 86, which is the only pure sports car currently in Toyota's lineup and costs about US$26,000 to US$40,000, depending on grade and options.

The Supra debuted 40 years ago as a souped-up Celica. It evolved into a style icon in the 1990s with smooth, flowing lines and an oversize rear wing. The car became a tuner's favourite, and a modified 1993 model became inked into automotive pop culture by smoking a Ferrari 458 in the 2001 film "The Fast and the Furious." In 2002, after almost 600,000 units sold, the final Supra rolled off the factory line as performance cars fell victim to a global economic slowdown.

Since then, Toyota has struggled in the segment. The 86 and its predecessor model have been in rapid decline in the U.S., with total deliveries of 6,846 cars last year – about a third of the 2013 peak, according to data provider Carsalesbase.com.

The new Supra is the result of a technology-sharing agreement with BMW AG, whose soft-top Z4 shares the same chassis and main components. The vehicle debuted in August and is set to go on sale this year.

The tardiness of the Supra by comparison may be a sign of just how important the project is to Toyoda, who test-drives every new vehicle. An amateur race-car driver, Toyoda at one point sent Supra engineers back to the drawing board to tweak the rear suspension, according to reports last year by multiple news outlets.

And more Toyota sports cars are on the way, including one based on the 1,000-horse-power supercar concept introduced in January. That signals a push by Toyoda, who took over as president in 2009, to look beyond the unit-sales focus that was paramount to his predecessors.

"I'm sure the company has many bean counters to keep Toyoda on the straight and narrow," said Urquhart, the analyst. "But it's good to have a car guy at the top."

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Toyota’s Mirai hydrogen fuel cell cars will make their Canadian debut in Quebec this year. Provincial Energy Minister Pierre Moreau says two stations to produce and supply the fuel will open in the fall.

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