Nissan Has a Turnaround Plan That Involves Cheaper EVs and Other Electrified Models

Chris Teague
by Chris Teague

The last decade hasn’t been the kindest to Nissan. Its former CEO had to flee Japan and is currently hiding in Lebanon, and several high-value employees left shortly after. Now, the company has reportedly backed out of a tentative deal to invest in Fisker and is eying the possibility that China could eat everyone’s lunch with affordable EVs. CEO Makoto Uchida recently outlined the automaker’s comeback roadmap, called “The Arc,” which he said would involve launching dozens of new models and enhancing the brand’s competitiveness in the EV space.


Uchida said Nissan plans to release 30 new models by 2026, including 16 electrified models. Additionally, the company will refresh 60 percent of its gas vehicle catalog at the same time. Importantly, Nissan’s EV roadmap includes plans to slash prices by 30 percent, achieving cost parity between EVs and ICE vehicles by 2030. The automaker will group the development of some models to reduce costs and partner with outside companies to leverage tech and other advantages.


These moves can’t come soon enough. Nissan’s sales have fallen significantly since 2019, down from 5.52 million that year to just 3.7 million last year. Additionally, the automaker is pursuing measures to improve revenues by the end of the decade and cut more costs.


This is no small feat for anyone to pull off, let alone a manufacturer feeling the upper limits of its financial capabilities. Nissan only sells two EVs in the U.S. at the moment, one of which is set to be discontinued. The brand does not sell any hybrids here, putting it far behind its home country rivals, Honda and Toyota, in the U.S. market.


[Image: Nissan]


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Chris Teague
Chris Teague

Chris grew up in, under, and around cars, but took the long way around to becoming an automotive writer. After a career in technology consulting and a trip through business school, Chris began writing about the automotive industry as a way to reconnect with his passion and get behind the wheel of a new car every week. He focuses on taking complex industry stories and making them digestible by any reader. Just don’t expect him to stay away from high-mileage Porsches.

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  • Merc190 Merc190 on Mar 26, 2024

    Maybe they'll make a smaller engined 260Z so I can afford it, I really dig the styling but want higher mpgs and lower operating costs.

  • Ronin Ronin on Mar 26, 2024


    Sales are down, so the solution is to roll out MORE e-cars- the very category that nobody wants? Even Tesla stock value is down at least 25% YTD, and they are starting to slash prices.


  • SaulTigh In the mid-90's I worked with a guy that drove a mid-80's T-Bird with the Essex V6. Paint was peeling and it literally didn't have an interior any longer (headliner and door panels were flat GONE, with just a crank and handle sticking out). Guy commuted about 30 miles a day and the thing would not die.He then got a much newer Pontiac and parked that T-bird under a tree. A year later, the Pontiac got totaled and he went out and put the jumper cables on that T-bird and it fired right up. Drove it another 2 years before sending it to the crusher. Impressive roach-osity for a domestic ride from that era.
  • Tassos Jong-iL I have many bad days, and wish my car would deal with my enemies for me. So yes please "gm" deliver this technology to One Korea.
  • MaintenanceCosts How about a system that detects when a driver is starting to engage in road rage and just backs off and drives smoothly for a bit?
  • IBx1 ST is dead so why not kill GR toopathetic automatic scum
  • VoGhost Interesting. The maga anti-America crowd is so used to being brainwashed into hating Tesla, they didn't realize that it's actually the foreign automakers that use slave labor.
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