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Nissan Plans EVs for Mississippi, Scouts for US Battery Plant

Automaker has plans to assemble EVs for its Nissan and Infiniti brands in Mississippi starting 2025 and aims to have EVs make up 40% of its US sales by 2030


NIssan is evaluating what to do with its EV business.
A man walks in front of the Nissan logo at Nissan Gallery in Yokohama. Photo: Reuters

 

Nissan Motor said on Thursday it will invest $500 million to retool its US assembly plant near Canton, Mississippi, to build two new electric vehicles (EVs), and a top executive said the automaker is looking for a US site to build a battery factory.

Nissan said it plans to assemble EVs for its Nissan and Infiniti brands in Mississippi starting in 2025.

The carmaker said it aims to have electric vehicles make up 40% of its US sales by 2030. Nissan has outlined plans to invest $18 billion to expand its global EV fleet through to 2030.

“We are investigating the right location and the right timing” to build the US battery factory, Nissan chief operating officer Ashwani Gupta said in an interview. “It should be soon.”

Nissan operates two assembly lines in Canton, one building light trucks including the Nissan Frontier and the other assembling Altima mid-sized sedans.

 

Altima Assembly Line

Gupta said the Altima assembly line will be redesigned to build both electric and combustion vehicles. Additional space in the Canton factory will be repurposed for battery pack assembly and other operations as Nissan aims for more vertical integration.

The 19-year-old Canton complex employs 5,000 people. Nissan said it will retrain 2,000 workers as part of the new investment.

The proposed models will have new lightweight architectures designed for battery-electric powertrains, and autonomous driving technology, Gupta said.

“A significant amount of time and money will be spent on up-skilling the workforce,” he said.

The automaker said the investment in Mississippi is “one of several” planned over the next five years to expand electric vehicle production in the US.

 

23 Models in Pipeline

Nissan’s Mexican operations should also receive new investment related to electric vehicles, Gupta said. “Obviously, Mexico will be a part of it.”

Nissan is investing as it sees markets becoming ready for EVs, he said. “We are not going for a big bang.”

The company has outlined plans to deliver 23 new EVs globally by 2030, including 15 battery electric models.

Nissan builds its compact Leaf electric vehicle at its complex in Smyrna, Tennessee, which gets electric motors from a Nissan factory in Decherd, Tennessee.

The Leaf, launched in 2010, put Nissan in the forefront of established manufacturers in the emerging electric vehicle market.

But the Leaf, with 226 miles (364 km) of range, has been eclipsed in sales by Tesla’s Model 3 sedan which has up to 358 miles of driving range per charge, according to the US Environmental Protection Agency.

 

  • Reuters with additional editing by Jim Pollard

 

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Jim Pollard

Jim Pollard is an Australian journalist based in Thailand since 1999. He worked for News Ltd papers in Sydney, Perth, London and Melbourne before travelling through SE Asia in the late 90s. He was a senior editor at The Nation for 17+ years and has a family in Bangkok.

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