Auto alliance zeros in on plug-ins

Renault-Nissan-Mitsubishi plan 12 new electric models by ’22

Carlos Ghosn, head of the Renault-Nissan-Mitsubishi alliance, is betting that more and more drivers will start choosing electric cars. “This is coming,” he said Friday in Paris.
Carlos Ghosn, head of the Renault-Nissan-Mitsubishi alliance, is betting that more and more drivers will start choosing electric cars. “This is coming,” he said Friday in Paris.

PARIS -- The Renault-Nissan-Mitsubishi alliance, gambling that auto owners are going to pivot soon to electric cars, announced plans Friday to produce 12 new electric models by 2022 and to make electric cars 30 percent of its overall output.

The carmakers -- who collectively sold more vehicles than any other company in the world in the first half of this year -- also announced plans to make "robo-taxis," driverless public transport vehicles and autonomous cars aimed at middle-class consumers.

The announcements are part of an overall strategic plan released Friday, aimed at taking advantage of the alliance's growing reach after taking over Mitsubishi last year to consolidate its position and make electric and driverless cars more affordable. They also unveiled a new logo for the three-way alliance and renamed it Renault-Nissan-Mitsubishi.

Chief Executive Officer Carlos Ghosn is betting that new government restrictions on diesel and gasoline cars will push drivers to go electric instead.

"We don't know how much time it's going to take ... but this is coming," Ghosn said. Britain and France have decided to ban new diesel and gasoline car sales from 2040 and China is considering a similar move.

"People are looking a little bit further in to the future, saying, 'I'm going to go electric because I don't want to have the problem with the car I have today three, four years down the road,'" he said.

All major car companies are trying to position themselves to profit from the expected but unpredictable and chaotic changes overtaking the industry: autonomous cars, connected cars that share data, car-sharing where consumers don't own a vehicle but order one by app, and low-emissions vehicles demanded by the European Union to fight climate change and by China, where many cities are fighting rampant pollution.

At the Frankfurt auto show this week, several car manufacturers vaunted electric and other low-emissions technology strategies. Volkswagen AG notably announced a long-term electrification campaign, saying its brands would introduce 80 new electric vehicles by 2025.

Renault-Nissan-Mitsubishi aims to increase the range of its electric cars to more than 372 miles, add smaller batteries and lower charging times. It wants 15 minutes of charging time to allow 140 miles of range, up from 55 miles of range now.

Nissan was at first a leader in electric cars with the Leaf, but it has been overtaken by GM's Bolt in terms of range.

Ghosn said electric car sales are growing by more than 50 percent annually in some European markets, and that his alliance is watching China's emissions policies closely.

At a conference in Paris, the alliance announced that through 2022 it will also expand development of vehicles with different levels of autonomous technology, starting with partial human monitoring and ending with a fully driverless car that can ride on highways.

It said it is seeking to be a "key operator" of driverless ride-hailing services and to provide autonomous vehicles for public transit and car-sharing. It did not provide specific targets or potential partners.

Ghosn said the alliance is aiming to save about $12 billion annually by 2022, notably by sharing more production platforms, purchasing and engineering, and through "human resources." He didn't elaborate on where potential job cuts might hit.

He said the carmakers aim to increase annual sales to $240 billion and to sell 14 million cars a year by 2022, up from 10 million in 2016.

Business on 09/16/2017

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