Electric Vehicles

Japan Automaker Suzuki to Invest $35bn in EVs, Batteries

 

Japan’s Suzuki Motor Corp is to pump 4.5 trillion yen ($34.8 billion) into electric vehicle and battery development and production over the next seven years.

Revealing the ambitious plan on Thursday, the Japanese automaker known for making compact “kei” cars, said it would invest 2 trillion yen in electrification and autonomous driving technologies, while allocating 2.5 trillion yen to build a battery EV plant and into renewable energy facilities.

Of the money earmarked for electrification, 500 billion yen would be invested in batteries, it said.

 

Also on AF: Dutch Officials Head to US For Possible China Chip Curbs Deal

 

Suzuki’s announcement comes after other Japanese automakers have rolled out similar goals to catch up with European and US rivals in the fast-growing battery EV market.

Mazda Motor Corp unveiled in November a $10.6 billion spending plan to electrify its vehicles.

Suzuki said it would introduce its first battery EVs, including small sport-utility vehicles and micro “kei” cars, in Japan in fiscal 2023. With cost-conscious customers in mind, company president Toshihiro Suzuki said he wanted to sell vehicles for around 1 million yen.

Suzuki plans to introduce battery EVs in Europe and India, and its first battery electric motorcycles globally, the following year.

The company is aiming to leverage its cooperation with car giant Toyota Motor Corp to capture a bigger share of India’s budding EV market, which is gaining momentum.

Suzuki plans to learn from Toyota how to use EV technology to make small electric cars, Suzuki said during a visit to India this month.

Still, Toshihiro Suzuki said on Thursday the automaker was not abandoning hybrid and internal combustion vehicle line-ups, pointing to a lack of charging infrastructure, high EV costs and concerns over limited battery resources.

For India, Suzuki’s key market, it predicted EVs would make up 15% of its vehicle line-up in fiscal 2030, while internal combustion engine cars using biofuels and ethanol as fuels would make up 60%.

“We will put in vehicles for various price ranges, for various people, for various regions,” Toshihiro Suzuki said.

 

  • Reuters with additional editing by Sean O’Meara

 

Read more:

Maruti Suzuki Urges India to Back Hybrid Cars as Well as EVs

Japan’s Mazda Pledges Carbon Neutral Factories by 2035

Toyota to Change EV Strategy to Close Gap With Tesla, BYD

 

 

Sean O'Meara

Sean O'Meara is an Editor at Asia Financial. He has been a newspaper man for more than 30 years, working at local, regional and national titles in the UK as a writer, sub-editor, page designer and print editor. A football, cricket and rugby fan, he has a particular interest in sports finance.

Recent Posts

TikTok Plans Legal Battle as US Senate Passes Divest-or-Ban Bill

Experts say that if a sale of TikTok does go through, it would be one…

2 hours ago

Tesla Profit Plunges, But Stock Jumps on Vow of ‘Affordable’ Cars

Shares jump 12% on news Tesla will make 'more affordable' EVs on its manufacturing lines,…

2 hours ago

ByteDance, TikTok’s $7m Lobbying Bid to Derail US Ban – CNBC

The popular video-sharing app’s owner will be told to sell its stake in nine months…

3 hours ago

Nikkei, Hang Seng, China Stocks Rally on Tech Earnings Boost

Investors were in optimistic mood on Wednesday as technology shares led the charge amid easing…

4 hours ago

US Call for 3 Years Jail for Binance Founder Changpeng Zhao

Prosecutors say Zhao, who faces sentencing in a Seattle court next week, should serve 36…

6 hours ago

PwC Probed For ‘Enabling Evergrande Misconduct For Years’

PricewaterhouseCoopers, one of the Big Four auditors, had been Evergrande’s auditor since 2009, when the…

22 hours ago