Nissan Aiming For 1 Million EV & Series-Hybrid Sales A Year By 2022

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Nissan is now planning to sell at least 1 million electrified vehicles a year by 2022, company execs have revealed.

Notably, as other automakers have done, Nissan is lumping together hybrids and fully electric plug-in cars. With these 1 million “EV” sales, Nissan is referring to series-hybrid models — such as the Nissan Note e-Power — as well as fully electric cars like the Nissan LEAF. We recently published a rather good article discussing the divisions between the different types of electrified vehicles out there, so I’ll just post a link to that here, for those wanting to better understand what this means in practice.

Interestingly, the announcement also revealed that Nissan is apparently not much interested in pursuing conventional plug-in hybrid (PHEV) tech, which is apparently viewed as being too expensive. Rather, it wants to focus on all-electric vehicles and series-hybrids.

Here are more notes from Nissan:

“As part of Nissan M.O.V.E. to 2022, the company also intends to:

  • Develop eight new pure electric vehicles, building on the success of the new Nissan LEAF;
  • Launch an electric car offensive in China under different brands;
  • Introduce an electric “kei” mini-vehicle in Japan;
  • Offer a global crossover electric vehicle, inspired by the Nissan IMx Concept;
  • Electrify new INFINITI models from fiscal year 2021;
  • Equip 20 models in 20 markets with autonomous driving technology; and,
  • Reach 100% connectivity for all new Nissan, Infiniti and Datsun cars sold in key markets by the end of the plan.”

On a related note, Nissan’s Chief Planning Officer Philippe Klein was also quoted as saying that the company had no plans to pause its self-driving vehicle development program because of the recent pedestrian fatality in Arizona that was potentially caused by one of Uber’s test vehicles. The reason given is that Nissan’s program was already being conducted with the “highest safety levels possible,” which is a statement hard to argue with, since Nissan’s program has apparently not been the cause of any civilian harm.

The same goes for the self-driving vehicle development programs operated by Waymo/Google and GM/Cruise. Uber is, so far anyways, an outlier when it comes to performance and safety — as the other firms just listed appear to have taken a more conservative approach to testing and development. (I’m not listing Tesla here one way or another since the firm’s approach to self-driving vehicle development is quite different than that of the above mentioned firms.)

As a reminder, Nissan & DeNA are currently operating a self-driving taxi pilot program in Yokohama, Japan, by the name of Easy Ride. Regular service is currently slated to begin sometime in the early 2020s.

In summary, “Nissan expects that electrified vehicles – including electric vehicles and e-POWER models – will make up 40% of the company’s sales in Japan and Europe by 2022 and 50% by 2025. In the US, the expectation is about 20-30% by 2025, while in China it’s 35-40%.

“INFINITI will accelerate the electrification trend, with new models being either pure electric vehicles or utilizing e-POWER technology from fiscal year 2021. By 2025, INFINITI expects electrified vehicles to comprise 50% of its global sales.”

This is all part of the Nissan M.O.V.E to 2022 plan.


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James Ayre

James Ayre's background is predominantly in geopolitics and history, but he has an obsessive interest in pretty much everything. After an early life spent in the Imperial Free City of Dortmund, James followed the river Ruhr to Cofbuokheim, where he attended the University of Astnide. And where he also briefly considered entering the coal mining business. He currently writes for a living, on a broad variety of subjects, ranging from science, to politics, to military history, to renewable energy.

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