Honda Commemorates 50 years of Innovation in America

Associates at Honda's First U.S. Auto Plant on 50th Anniversary

By Zack Newmark
June 12, 2009 4:00 PM
Filed Under: American, Classics, Honda, Japanese, Production

Honda's fiftieth anniversary in the American market came and went yesterday, with company employees celebrating at Honda's U.S. headquarters in Torrance, California.  The company's Stateside operations began in 1959 with sales of the Honda 50 motorcycle.

Since then, American Honda Motor Company reached several innovative milestones.  In 1982 they became the first Japanese company to build both motorcycles and automobiles in the States.  With the 1986 introduction of Acura they paved the way for Japanese companies to establish a separate, top-shelf badge. 

Tetsuo Iwamura, President & CEO of American Honda Motor Co., said, "On behalf of the tens of thousands of Honda associates in America, past and present, we offer our deepest thanks to our customers for placing their trust in Honda over the past 50 years."

Honda has certainly come a long way from their American beginning in a small, Los Angeles storefront.  The company now employs 27,000 across 36 facilities in the United States.

But perhaps most impressive is Honda's efforts in more environmentally friendly vehicles.  The 1974 Honda Civic CVCC was the first car without a catalytic converter to pass the U.S. Clean Air Act, while the '77 Civic was the first car to be named the most fuel efficient car by the United States Environmental Protection Agency.  The 1999 Honda Insight was America's first gas/electric hybrid to be mass produced, while the 2002 Honda FCX became the first-ever U.S.-backed hydrogen fuel cell car.

"Today, in the face of new challenges, including the preservation of our environment, we renew our commitment to exceed the expectations of our customers and society," Iwamura said.

This is hardly the end of American Honda Motor Company's journey.  "Along with a renewed focus on quality, we begin our next fifty years by accelerating our efforts to develop and deploy new technologies that put Honda at the forefront of this global challenge, to create a cleaner and more sustainable future for generations to come."

Source: Honda

Press Release (Click to expand)

Honda Commemorates 50 years of Innovation in America

Torrance, California. - Honda today marked its first 50 years in America, commemorating the establishment of American Honda Motor Co., Inc., in a small Los Angeles storefront on June 11, 1959. Honda associates observed the occasion with a brief ceremony at the company's Torrance, Calif. headquarters.

"On behalf of the tens of thousands of Honda associates in America, past and present, we offer our deepest thanks to our customers for placing their trust in Honda over the past 50 years," said American Honda President & CEO Tetsuo Iwamura. "Today, in the face of new challenges, including the preservation of our environment, we renew our commitment to exceed the expectations of our customers and society."

Starting in 1959, with the fuel-efficient Honda 50 motorcycle, to the newly launched 2010 Honda Insight gas-electric hybrid vehicle, Honda has introduced new technologies and business strategies that have shaped the industry and the growth of Honda, including:

* First automaker to meet U.S. Clean Air Act without a catalytic converter - Civic CVCC (1974)
* First vehicle to top U.S. EPA list of most fuel efficient cars - Civic (1977)
* First Japanese automaker to build motorcycles (1979) and automobiles (1982) in America - Marysville, Ohio*
* First Japanese automaker to establish a luxury automobile brand -- Acura (1986)
* First mass produced gas electric hybrid car introduced in America -- Insight (1999)
* First government-certified hydrogen fuel cell vehicle -- FCX (2002)

Honda has steadily expanded its U.S. presence to encompass a broad range of products and operations. Today, Honda employs more than 27,000 U.S. associates engaged in the design, development, manufacturing, sale and servicing of Honda and Acura products including automobiles, motorcycles, ATVs, personal water craft, power equipment, and an advanced light jet.

Honda operates 10 U.S. manufacturing plants with two new plants under construction, along with 14 R&D facilities and more than 12 regional sales, parts and service, and finance offices around the country. The company's network of U.S. parts suppliers comprises 545 companies in 34 states with annual purchases exceeding $17.5 billion in 2008.

Honda History in America

American Honda was the first overseas subsidiary of Honda Motor Co., Ltd., established eleven years after HMC's inception as a small motorcycle manufacturer in Japan. Honda entered the U.S. market in 1959 with the step-through Honda 50 motorcycle and helped spur the dramatic growth of the U.S. motorcycle market, as it became the best-selling brand in America.

The introduction of the fuel-efficient Civic in 1973 paved the way for Honda's entry into the U.S. auto industry. As America faced the first oil crisis in 1973 and then the U.S. Clean Air Act tightened air emissions standards in 1975, Civic became both the first automobile to meet the Clean Air Act without the need for a catalytic converter and was ranked number one on the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's first list of America's most fuel efficient cars (1977).

Based on its longstanding commitment to develop and build products close to the customer, Honda established research and development operations in America in 1975, and U.S. manufacturing in 1979, starting with production of motorcycles in Marysville, Ohio. Honda became the first Japanese automaker to build cars in America with the start of Accord production at the Marysville Auto Plant in November 1982. In May 2009, Honda reached the 15 million unit milestone in U.S. automobile production.

In 1986, the company expanded into the luxury automobile market with the creation of the Acura brand, the first luxury nameplate from a Japanese automaker. Acura earned a top rating in J.D. Power and Associates' Customer Satisfaction Index for four consecutive years (1986-1989).

In the 1990s, Honda introduced the U.S. automobile industry's first low-emissions vehicles, meeting challenging new emissions requirements in California while also enhancing fuel efficiency. In 1999, Honda introduced America's first mass production hybrid vehicle, the Insight, followed in 2002 by the Honda FCX, the first fuel cell vehicle certified by the U.S. government for daily use and the first to be placed in the hands of an individual consumer.

In 2008, the company began leasing its next-generation FCX Clarity fuel cell sedan, the industry's most advanced zero-emissions vehicle. In March 2009 Honda introduced the 2010 Honda Insight, America's most affordable hybrid, with plans to launch another all-new hybrid within the next several years based on the company's sporty CR-Z hybrid concept vehicle.

"Looking to the future, we are committed to advancing Honda's legacy of environmental leadership to help address the twin challenges of global climate change and energy sustainability," said Iwamura. "Along with a renewed focus on quality, we begin our next fifty years by accelerating our efforts to develop and deploy new technologies that put Honda at the forefront of this global challenge, to create a cleaner and more sustainable future for generations to come."

 

Comments

9TNine
June 13, 2009 8:04 PM
...but Honda missed a trick with the Prius!

kenta
June 15, 2009 2:53 PM
I enjoyed very much reading the book about "Soichiro Honda", the founder and the first engineer of Honda motors. His achievements during his time were extremely high. Have anyone known that the variable-valve timing technology, which is commonly used today by every single automaker has developed by Honda since they were still producing a motorcycle?

They gave the other automakers free license to this patent, only under one condition that they should promote the Honda's name as the inventor of the technology. The very first automakers to except this technology were Toyota, Ford and BMW. Of course, each company improved the original concept in their own ways, but it was Honda who lighted up this innovative idea and makes their name to stay in the same roll like the others.


Edited by user on June 15, 2009 at 2:59 PM
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