Nissan LEAF Electric Vehicle to be Built in UK

2010 Nissan Leaf Electric Vehicle

Launches in 2010

By Thami Masemola
March 18, 2010 10:00 am
Filed Under: Electric Vehicle, Nissan

Nissan has announced that its LEAF zero-emissions electric car will start production at the company's Sunderland plant in the UK in 2013. This follows production in Japan which starts later this year and the US in 2012. The Sunderland plant will have a capacity of 50,000 LEAF units per annum.

"This investment is a fantastic vote of confidence in the Sunderland plant and its excellent workforce," said UK Business Secretary Lord Mandelson. "The automotive sector is of key importance to the UK. It supports R&D, technological innovation, skills and a supply chain that's a mainstay of the wider manufacturing sector. Today's news from Nissan, with support from government, shows that by working together we can achieve our aim of making the UK a world-leader in ultra-low carbon vehicles."

Nissan is also commencing constructing of an advanced lithium-ion battery plant in Sunderland this April. It will have a capacity of 60,000 batteries per year and will begin manufacturing for Nissan and its partner Renault in 2012. Both investments represent a £420 million (€468.2 million) capital injection.

Billed as the first mass-produced and affordable family electric car, the LEAF will launch in Japan, the US and some European markets later this year. The rest of the world, where applicable, will get it from 2012.

 


Press Release (Click to expand)

NISSAN TO BUILD LEAF ELECTRIC VEHICLE IN SUNDERLAND

UK to become third global manufacturing location for Nissan electric vehicles

  • Production to begin in early 2013
  • Initial annual production capacity in Sunderland of about 50,000 units
  • Together with Sunderland battery plant production, represents more than a 420 million GBP (468.2 million euro) investment in zero emission mobility

SUNDERLAND, UK (March 18, 2010) -Nissan Motor Co., Ltd., further underlined its commitment to zero emission leadership today by announcing that the Nissan LEAF will be manufactured at its plant in Sunderland, UK.

Nissan LEAF - the first in a range of forthcoming Nissan electric vehicles (EVs) - is the world's first affordable, mass produced zero emission car and embodies Nissan's vision for an environmentally sustainable future for road transport.

Nissan also said that construction of its advanced lithium-ion battery plant, announced last year, will begin this April. The facility, which will be located at Sunderland, will have a production capacity of 60,000 units a year and will start manufacturing batteries in 2012 for both Nissan and its Alliance partner Renault.

The production of Nissan LEAF and the batteries represents a total investment of more than 420 million GBP (468.2 million euros) in the Sunderland Plant and is expected to maintain about 2,250 jobs at Nissan and across the UK supply chain. The investment will be supported by a 20.7 million GBP (23.1 million euros) Grant for Business Investment (GBI) from the UK Government and a proposed finance package from the European Investment Bank of up to 220 million euros (197.3 million GBP).

The UK's Business Secretary Lord Mandelson said: "This investment is a fantastic vote of confidence in the Sunderland plant and its excellent workforce. The automotive sector is of key importance to the UK. It supports R&D, technological innovation, skills and a supply chain that's a mainstay of the wider manufacturing sector.

"Today's news from Nissan, with support from government, shows that by working together we can achieve our aim of making the UK a world-leader in ultra-low carbon vehicles."

Andy Palmer, senior vice president at Nissan Motor Co., Ltd., and responsible for the company's global EV strategy, said: "The world is at the dawn of a new era in automotive transport. Nissan LEAF, which will go on sale later this year, is a five-seater hatchback that offers the same space, practicality and performance of a similar car in its class - minus the tailpipe emissions."

"Thanks to the UK's firm commitment to a low carbon future in terms of infrastructure, customer incentives and educational programmes, Nissan LEAF will be built at Sunderland, making the UK the third country in the world to produce this revolutionary car."

Production of Nissan LEAF will begin in Oppama, Japan later this year followed by Smyrna, Tennessee, USA in 2012. Sunderland will come on-line in early 2013 with an initial annual production capacity of about 50,000 units. The three production sites will support the sales launch of the model, which begins in late 2010 in Japan, the United States and selected European markets, ahead of global mass marketing from 2012.

Nissan and its Alliance partner Renault are the only automakers committed to mass marketing pure electric vehicles on a global scale and together have announced production capacity of 500,000 units per year. To date, the Alliance has entered into more than 50 partnerships worldwide with countries, cities, organisations and other key stakeholders to prepare the markets and infrastructure for the successful adoption of EVs around the world.

Work to integrate Nissan LEAF into Sunderland's manufacturing process will begin in 2012. The car will be launched on the plant's ‘Number 2' production line alongside the recently unveiled Juke compact crossover car, which enters production in August 2010.

Nissan will continue to work in partnership with local and national government in preparation for the UK sales launch of Nissan LEAF in early 2011.

Last December, Nissan and Regional Development Agency One North East signed a definitive agreement on zero emission mobility. The agreement includes the development of a regional network of charging points, supply of Nissan LEAF to the region from early 2011 and a range of incentives for early adopters of EVs, such as a period of free charging and use of dedicated EV lanes.

Although zero-emission vehicles are the centerpiece of Nissan's product strategy, the company is also investing in a portfolio of low-emission technologies (called PureDrive) such as clean diesels, efficient internal-combustion engines and hybrids.

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Note: Amounts in euros and pounds are translated for the convenience of the reader at the foreign exchange rate of 1.115 euro/pound and 0.897 pound/euro (as of Wednesday March 17, 2010)

NISSAN LEAF at a glance:

  • World's first affordable, mass produced zero emission car
  • Five-seater C-segment hatchback
  • Powered by an 80kW electric motor
  • Charges to 80% of capacity in under 30 minutes (rapid charging)
  • Real-world range: 160 km (100 miles - US-LA 4 mode)
  • Top speed of more than 140 km/h (90 mph)
  • Produced on all-new dedicated EV platform

Sunderland Plant facts:

  • Established in 1984 (start of production 1986)
  • Total investment in plant to date: 2.68 billion GBP (2.99 billion euros)
  • Total volume since start of production: 5.6 million units
  • Total 2009 volume: 338,000 units
  • Current workforce: 4,100 employees
  • UK's largest car producer and exporter
  • Produced a third of all cars built in the UK in 2009
  • Current model line-up: Qashqai, Qashqai +2, Note and Micra

Comments

BabyMilo
March 18, 2010 11:17 am
Am i the only one who finds this car crazyly ugly?

9TNine
March 18, 2010 11:57 am
Well it does look a bit like JaJa Binks...

http://www.myfreewallpapers.net/starwars/pages/jar-jar-binks.shtml

but then again it is rumoured to have Golf GTi-like performance. My kind of "green'car!

9TNine
March 18, 2010 1:16 pm
...


Edited by user on March 18, 2010 at 1:17 pm
N20_Purge
March 18, 2010 11:43 pm
You ain't alone on that thought BabyMilo. Maybe it is like that to be very aerodynamic like most eco-friendly cars.

eddie
March 19, 2010 8:37 am
I would buy one. I am ready for new technology. This car is essentially no maintence// no oil change, tuneups etc.

zeiar
March 19, 2010 9:46 pm
This is the ugliest car ever! No one will buy that no matter how green it is...

surdzosurdzo
March 19, 2010 11:40 pm
Bravo Nissan!!! Go for it! No matter what design you create... no fossil fuel that's what we count...

MaxiTI
March 21, 2010 5:01 pm
I must be looking at something else entirely, because I don't think the LEAF is ugly at all. In fact, I'm excited at the prospect.

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