Japan's Nissan promises aggressive electrification push to cut costs, boost global sales
- Nissan sold nearly 3.4 million vehicles globally, up 5%, aiming for 60% electrified vehicle sales by 2030.
- In pursuit of innovation, Nissan aims to collaborate with rivals like Honda and reshape the auto industry values.
- Nissan plans to cut EV production costs by 30% to compete with internal combustion models.
54 Articles
54 Articles
Nissan announces plans to make 16 new electrified vehicles by 2026
Image: Nissan Nissan has laid out a new plan to electrify 16 of the 30 vehicles it produces by 2026, with the rest using internal combustion instead. For those of us in North America, the company says it plans to release seven new vehicles in the US and Canada, although it’s not clear how many of those will be some type of EV. Nissan says the US is getting “e-POWER and plug-in hybrid models” — each of those uses a mix of electricity and fuel fo…
Nissan wants to make e-cars cheaper by a third!
Nissan is actually an electric car pioneer; the Leaf has been on sale for almost 14 years. The Japanese have recently lost ground in this segment. But the backlog should now be made up quickly — including with drastically lower prices. Nissan wants to reduce the cost of e-cars to combustion levels by 2030. The next generation of battery vehicles should be 30 percent cheaper than the current Japanese models, as the company announced at the presen…
Nissan Aims To Slash EV Costs to Gasoline-Car Level by 2030
Nissan Motor will look to slash the cost of its next-generation electric vehicles by 30% to reach cost parity between its EVs and conventional gasoline models by fiscal year 2030, the Japanese car-manufacturing giant said on Monday in a new business plan. Nissan, which was an early adopter of EV technology and has been making the Nissan LEAF, a battery-electric powered compact car, since 2010, has been feeling intense competition from a crowded …
Nissan aims to balance the price of thermal and electric vehicles by 2030
Nissan announces its electric vehicle strategy plan for the next three years, called 'The Arrow.' The main goal is to increase global sales by one million units, reduce zero-emission costs by 30%, and equip them with lithium-ferrophosphate batteries, much more affordable. By 2030, they aim to achieve price parity between combustion engines and 100% electric vehicles, which could reverse the decline in electric vehicle sales experienced by the co…
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