I'm not sure a 155 hp 2.0l and a 190HP 2.5 can accomplish that. ED
I think it will. The 2.4L Honda engine is 185hp and gets very good fuel economy - it uses port fuel injection and a typical 5 speed auto. Throw on direct injection, higher compression and Mazda's tight 6 speed auto and all of a sudden you're at the same fuel economy that the 2.0G CX-5 gets. The CX-5 doesn't have enough torque, which is something I was wrong about as I always said it would have enough. Again, I think you guys will be surprised at how much 25% more displacement allows the engine to effortlessly accelerate, creating similar fuel economy when driven similarly. Additionally, it will have more power when it's requested and not require zinging the engine to 6000rpm to merge with 60mph traffic.
A good example of what I'm trying to put into words is my '97 Civic. With it I get 31.x mpg driving in the city and 31.x mpg driving on the highway @ 70-75mph. Load has a big impact on fuel economy.