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Nissan

Nissan Motor Co., Ltd. (Japanese: 日産自動車株式会社, Hepburn: Nissan Jidōsha kabushiki gaisha), trading as Nissan Motor Corporation and often shortened to Nissan,[a] is a Japanese multinational automobile manufacturer headquartered in Nishi-ku, Yokohama, Japan. The company sells its vehicles under the Nissan and Infiniti brands, and formerly the Datsun brand, with in-house performance tuning products (including cars) labelled Nismo. The company traces back to the beginnings of the 20th century, with the Nissan zaibatsu, now called Nissan Group.

Nissan Motor Co., Ltd.
Headquarters in Nishi-ku, Yokohama
Nissan Motor Corporation
Native name
日産自動車株式会社
Nissan Jidōsha kabushiki gaisha
TypePublic (Kabushiki gaisha)
IndustryAutomotive
Founded26 December 1933; 89 years ago (1933-12-26) (under Nissan Group)[1][2]
Founders
Headquarters,
Japan (Officially registered in Kanagawa-ku, Yokohama, Kanagawa Prefecture)
Area served
Worldwide
Key people
ProductsAutomobiles, luxury vehicles, commercial vehicles, outboard motors, forklift trucks
Production output
4,757,000 units (2020)[4]
Revenue ¥9.878 trillion (FY 2020)[5]
US$90.863 billion[6]
¥−40.5 billion (FY 2020)[5]
¥−671.2 billion (FY 2020)[5]
US$−6.173 billion[6]
Total assets ¥16.97 trillion (FY 2020)[5]
US$153.09 billion[6]
Total equity ¥4.42 trillion (FY 2020)[5]
US$50.057 billion[6]
OwnerRenault (43.7% cross ownership)
Number of employees
136,134 (2020)[7]
Divisions
Subsidiaries
List
WebsiteOfficial website

Since 1999, Nissan has been part of the Renault–Nissan–Mitsubishi Alliance (Mitsubishi joining in 2016), a partnership between Nissan and Mitsubishi Motors of Japan, with Renault of France. As of 2013, Renault holds a 43.4% voting stake in Nissan, while Nissan holds a 15% non-voting stake in Renault. Since October 2016 Nissan has held a 34% controlling stake in Mitsubishi Motors.[8]

In 2013, Nissan was the sixth largest automaker in the world, after Toyota, General Motors, Volkswagen Group, Hyundai Motor Group, and Ford.[9] In 2014, Nissan was the largest car manufacturer in North America.[10] With a revenue of $80 billion in 2022, Nissan was the 10th largest automobile maker in the world,[11] as well as being the leading Japanese brand in China, Russia and Mexico.[12]

As of April 2018, Nissan was the world's largest electric vehicle (EV) manufacturer, with global sales of more than 320,000 all-electric vehicles.[13] The top-selling vehicle of the car-maker's fully-electric lineup is the Nissan LEAF, the No. 2 top-selling electric car globally, just behind the Tesla Model 3.[14]

Introduction

Beginnings of Datsun brand name from 1914

Masujiro Hashimoto (橋本増治郎) founded the Kwaishinsha (Kaishinsha) Motor Car Works (快進社自働車工場, Kwaishinsha jidōsha kōjō, A Good Company Automobile Manufacturer) on 1 July 1911 in Azabu-Hiroo district of Tokyo. In 1914, the company produced its first car, called the DAT.[3][1][2]

The new car's model name was an acronym of the company's investors' surnames:

  • Kenjiro Den (Den Kenjirō)
  • Rokuro Aoyama (Aoyama Rokurō)
  • Meitaro Takeuchi (Takeuchi Meitarō)

It was renamed to Kaishinsha Motorcar Co., Ltd. in 1918, and again to DAT Jidosha & Co., Ltd. (DAT Motorcar Co.) in 1925. DAT Motors built trucks in addition to the DAT and Datsun passenger cars. The vast majority of its output were trucks, due to an almost non-existent consumer market for passenger cars at the time, and disaster recovery efforts as a result of the 1923 Great Kantō earthquake. Beginning in 1918, the first DAT trucks were produced for the military market. At the same time, Jitsuyo Jidosha Co., Ltd. (jitsuyo means practical use or utility) produced small trucks using parts, and materials imported from the United States.[15][better source needed]

Commercial operations were placed on hold during Japan's participation in World War I, and the company contributed to the war effort.

In 1926, the Tokyo-based DAT Motors merged with the Osaka-based Jitsuyo Jidosha Co., Ltd (Jitsuyō Jidōsha Seizō Kabushiki-Gaisha) a.k.a. Jitsuyo Jidosha Seizo (established 1919 as a Kubota subsidiary) to become DAT Jidosha Seizo Co., Ltd Automobile Manufacturing Co., Ltd. (ダット自動車製造株式会社, DAT Jidōsha Seizō Kabushiki-Gaisha) in Osaka until 1932. From 1923 to 1925, the company produced light cars and trucks under the name of Lila.[16] In 1929 DAT Automobile Manufacturing Inc. merged with a separated part of the manufacturing business of IHI Corporation to become Automobile Industries Co., Ltd.[clarification needed]

In 1931, DAT came out with a new smaller car, called the Datsun Type 11, the first "Datson", meaning "Son of DAT". Later in 1933 after Nissan Group zaibatsu took control of DAT Motors, the last syllable of Datson was changed to "sun", because "son" also means "loss" in Japanese, hence the name "Datsun" (ダットサン, Dattosan).[17]

In 1933, the company name was Nipponized to Jidosha-Seizo Co., Ltd. (Jidōsha Seizō Kabushiki-Gaisha, "Automobile Manufacturing Share Company") and was moved to Yokohama.

Nissan name first used in 1930s

In 1928, Yoshisuke Aikawa (nickname: Gisuke/Guisuke Ayukawa) founded the holding company Nihon Sangyo (日本産業 Japan Industries or Nihon Industries). The name 'Nissan' originated during the 1930s as an abbreviation[18] used on the Tokyo Stock Exchange for Nihon Sangyo. This company was Nissan "Zaibatsu" which included Tobata Casting and Hitachi. At this time Nissan controlled foundries and auto parts businesses, but Aikawa did not enter automobile manufacturing until 1933.[19]

The zaibatsu eventually grew to include 74 firms and became the fourth-largest in Japan during World War II.[20]

In 1931, DAT Jidosha Seizo became affiliated with Tobata Casting and was merged into Tobata Casting in 1933. As Tobata Casting was a Nissan company, this was the beginning of Nissan's automobile manufacturing.[21]

Nissan Motor organized in 1934

In 1934, Aikawa separated the expanded automobile parts division of Tobata Casting and incorporated it as a new subsidiary, which he named Nissan Motor Co., Ltd. (日産自動車, Nissan Jidōsha).[22] The shareholders of the new company; however, were not enthusiastic about the prospects of the automobile in Japan, so Aikawa bought out all the Tobata Casting shareholders (using capital from Nihon Industries) in June 1934. At this time, Nissan Motor effectively became owned by Nihon Sangyo and Hitachi.[23]

In 1935, the construction of its Yokohama plant was completed. 44 Datsuns were shipped to Asia, Central and South America. In 1935, the first car manufactured by an integrated assembly system rolled off the line at the Yokohama plant.[15] Nissan built trucks, airplanes, and engines for the Imperial Japanese Army. In November 1937 Nissan moved its headquarters to Hsinking, the capital of Manchukuo. In December the company changed its name to Manchuria Heavy Industries Developing Co (MHID).[24][25]

In 1940, the first knockdown kits were shipped to Dowa Jidosha Kogyo (Dowa Automobile), one of MHID's companies, for assembly.[15] In 1944, the head office was moved to Nihonbashi, Tokyo, and the company name was changed to Nissan Heavy Industries, Ltd., which the company kept through 1949.[15]

Nissan's early American connection

 
The Graham-Paige based Nissan Model 70 sedan

DAT had inherited Kubota's chief designer, American engineer William R. Gorham. This, along with Aikawa's 1908 visit to Detroit, was to greatly affect Nissan's future.[15][26] Although it had always been Aikawa's intention to use cutting-edge auto making technology from America, it was Gorham that carried out the plan. Most of the machinery and processes originally came from the United States. When Nissan started to assemble larger vehicles under the "Nissan" brand in 1937, much of the design plans and plant facilities were supplied by the Graham-Paige Company.[22] Nissan also had a Graham license under which passenger cars, buses, and trucks were made.[26]

In his 1986 book The Reckoning, David Halberstam states "In terms of technology, Gorham was the founder of the Nissan Motor Company" and that "young Nissan engineers who had never met him spoke of him as a god and could describe in detail his years at the company and his many inventions."[27]

Austin Motor Company relations (1937–1960s)

 
1937 Datsun model 16
 
Austin Seven Ruby

From 1934 Datsun began to build Austin 7s under license. This operation became the greatest success of Austin's overseas licensing of its Seven and marked the beginning of Datsun's international success.[citation needed]

In 1952, Nissan entered into a legal agreement with Austin,[28][29] for Nissan to assemble 2,000 Austins from imported partially assembled sets and sell them in Japan under the Austin trademark. The agreement called for Nissan to make all Austin parts locally within three years, a goal Nissan met. Nissan produced and marketed Austins for seven years. The agreement also gave Nissan the rights to use Austin patents, which Nissan used in developing its own engines for its Datsun line of cars. In 1953, British-built Austins were assembled and sold, but by 1955, the Austin A50 – completely built by Nissan and featuring a new 1489 cc engine — was on the market in Japan. Nissan produced 20,855 Austins from 1953 to 1959.[30]

Nissan leveraged the Austin patents to further develop its own modern engine designs beyond what Austin's A- and B-family designs offered. The apex of the Austin-derived engines was the new design A series engine in 1966. In 1967, Nissan introduced its new highly advanced four-cylinder overhead cam (OHC) Nissan L engine, which while similar to Mercedes-Benz OHC designs was a totally new engine designed by Nissan. This engine powered the new Datsun 510, which gained Nissan respect in the worldwide sedan market. Then, in 1969 Nissan introduced the Datsun 240Z sports car which used a six-cylinder variation of the L series engine, developed under Nissan Machinery (Nissan Koki Co., Ltd. 日産工機) in 1964, a former remnant of another auto manufacturer Kurogane. The 240Z was an immediate sensation and lifted Nissan to world-class status in the automobile market.[31]

100 Day Strike of 1953

 
1953 Nissan labor dispute

During the Korean War, Nissan was a major vehicle producer for the U.S. Army.[32] After the Korean War ended, significant levels of anti-communist sentiment existed in Japan. The union that organized Nissan's workforce was strong and militant.[32][33] Nissan was in financial difficulties, and when wage negotiations came, the company took a hard line. Workers were locked out, and several hundred were fired. The Japanese government and the U.S. occupation forces arrested several union leaders.[32] The union ran out of strike funds and was defeated. A new labor union was formed,[34] with Shioji Ichiro one of its leaders. Ichiro had studied at Harvard University on a U.S. government scholarship. He advanced an idea to trade wage cuts against saving 2,000 jobs.[35] Ichiro's idea was made part of a new union contract[35] that prioritized productivity. Between 1955 and 1973, Nissan "expanded rapidly on the basis of technical advances supported – and often suggested – by the union." Ichiro became president of the Confederation of Japan Automobile Workers' Unions and "the most influential figure in the right wing of the Japanese labor movement."[32]

Merger with Prince Motor Company

 
1966 Prince R380 racecar

In 1966, Nissan merged with the Prince Motor Company, bringing more upmarket cars, including the Skyline and Gloria, into its selection. The Prince name was eventually abandoned, and successive Skylines and Glorias bore the Nissan name. "Prince" was used at the Japanese Nissan dealership "Nissan Prince Shop" until 1999, when "Nissan Red Stage" replaced it. Nissan Red Stage itself has been replaced as of 2007. The Skyline lives on as the G Series of Infiniti.

Miss Fairlady

To capitalize on the renewed investment during 1964 Summer Olympics, Nissan established the gallery on the second and third floors of the San-ai building, located in Ginza, Tokyo. To attract visitors, Nissan started using beautiful female showroom attendants where Nissan held a competition to choose five candidates as the first class of Nissan Miss Fairladys, modeled after "Datsun Demonstrators" from the 1930s who introduced cars. The Fairlady name was used as a link to the popular Broadway play My Fair Lady of the era. Miss Fairladys became the marketers of the Datsun Fairlady 1500.[36][37][38]

In April 2008, 14 more Miss Fairlady candidates were added, for a total of 45 Nissan Miss Fairlady pageants (22 in Ginza, 8 in Sapporo, 7 in Nagoya, 7 in Fukuoka).[39]

In April 2012, 7 more Miss Fairlady candidates were added, for a total of 48 Nissan Miss Fairlady pageants (26 in Ginza, 8 in Sapporo, 7 in Nagoya, 7 in Fukuoka).[40]

In April 2013, 6 more Miss Fairlady candidates were added to Ginza showroom, for a total of 27 48th Ginza Nissan Miss Fairlady pageants.[41]

Foreign expansion

 
1971 Datsun 240Z (U.S. model) in green metallic

In the 1950s, Nissan decided to expand into worldwide markets. Nissan management realized their Datsun small car line would fill an unmet need in markets such as Australia and the world's largest car market, the United States. They first showed the Datsun Bluebird at the 1958 Los Angeles Auto Show.[15][42] The company formed a U.S. subsidiary, Nissan Motor Corporation U.S.A., in Gardena, California[43] in 1960, headed by Yutaka Katayama.[15] Nissan continued to improve its sedans with the latest technological advancements and chic Italianate styling in sporty cars such as the Datsun Fairlady roadsters, the race-winning 411 series, the Datsun 510 and the Datsun 240Z. By 1970, Nissan had become one of the world's largest exporters of automobiles.[44]

In the wake of the 1973 oil crisis, consumers worldwide (especially in the lucrative U.S. market) began turning to high-quality small economy cars. To meet the growing demand for its new Nissan Sunny, the company built new factories in Mexico (Nissan Mexicana was established in the early 1960s and commenced manufacturing in 1966 at the Cuernavaca assembly facility, making it Nissan's first North American assembly plant), Australia, New Zealand, Taiwan, United States (Nissan Motor Manufacturing Corporation USA was established in 1980) and South Africa. The "Chicken Tax" of 1964 placed a 25% tax on commercial vans imported to the United States.[45] In response, Nissan, Toyota Motor Corp. and Honda Motor Co. began building plants in the U.S. in the early 1980s.[45] Nissan's initial assembly plant Smyrna assembly plant (which broke ground in 1980) at first built only trucks such as the 720 and Hardbody, but has since expanded to produce several car and SUV lines, including the Altima, Maxima, Rogue, Pathfinder, Infiniti QX60 and LEAF all-electric car. The addition of mass-market automobiles was in response to the 1981 Voluntary Export Restraints imposed by the U.S. Government. An engine plant in Decherd, Tennessee followed, most recently a second assembly plant was established in Canton, Mississippi. In 1970, Teocar was created, which was a Greek assembly plant created in cooperation with Theoharakis.[46] It was situated in Volos, Greece and its geographical location was perfect as the city had a major port. The plant started production in 1980, assembling Datsun pick-up trucks and continuing with the Nissan Cherry and Sunny automobiles. Until May 1995 170,000 vehicles were made, mainly for Greece.

By the early 1980s, Nissan (Datsun) had long been the best selling Japanese brand in Europe.[47] In order to overcome export tariffs and delivery costs to its European customers, Nissan contemplated establishing a plant in Europe. Nissan tried to convert the Greek plant into one manufacturing cars for all European countries.[citation needed] However, due to issues with the Greek government[citation needed] not only did that not happen but the plant itself was closed. A joint venture with Italy's then state-owned Alfa Romeo was also entered in 1980, leading to Italian production of the Nissan Cherry and an Alfa-badged and motorized version, the Alfa Romeo Arna.[48] After an extensive review, Nissan decided to go it alone instead. The City of Sunderland in the north east of England was chosen for its skilled workforce and its location near major ports. The plant was completed in 1986 as the subsidiary Nissan Motor Manufacturing (UK) Ltd. By 2007, it was producing 400,000 vehicles per year, landing it the title of the most productive plant in Europe.

 

In 2001, Nissan established a manufacturing plant in Brazil. In 2005, Nissan added operations in India, through its subsidiary Nissan Motor India Pvt. Ltd.[49] With its global alliance partner, Renault, Nissan invested $990 million to set up a manufacturing facility in Chennai, catering to the Indian market as well as a base for exports of small cars to Europe.[50][51] Nissan entered the Middle East market in 1957 when it sold its first car in Saudi Arabia.[52] Nissan sold nearly 520,000 new vehicles in China in 2009 in a joint venture with Dongfeng Motor. To meet increased production targets, Dongfeng-Nissan expanded its production base in Guangzhou, which would become Nissan's largest factory around the globe in terms of production capacity.[53] Nissan also has moved and expanded its Nissan Americas Inc. headquarters, moving from Los Angeles to Franklin, Tennessee in the Nashville area.[54]

Alliance with Renault

In 1999, facing severe financial difficulties, Nissan entered an alliance with Renault of France.[55] In June 2001, Renault executive Carlos Ghosn was named chief executive officer of Nissan. In May 2005, Ghosn was named president of Nissan's partner company Renault. He was appointed president and CEO of Renault on 6 May 2009.[56]

Under CEO Ghosn's "Nissan Revival Plan" (NRP), the company has rebounded in what many leading economists consider to be one of the most spectacular corporate turnarounds in history, catapulting Nissan to record profits and a dramatic revitalization of both its Nissan and Infiniti model line-ups.[57][58] Ghosn has been recognized in Japan for the company's turnaround in the midst of an ailing Japanese economy. Ghosn and the Nissan turnaround were featured in Japanese manga and popular culture. His achievements in revitalizing Nissan were noted by the Japanese government, which awarded him the Japan Medal with Blue Ribbon in 2004.[59]

In February 2017, Ghosn announced he would step down as CEO of Nissan on 1 April 2017, while remaining chairman of the company. He was replaced as CEO by his then-deputy Hiroto Saikawa.[60] On 19 November 2018, Ghosn was fired as chairman following his arrest for the alleged under-reporting of his income to Japanese financial authorities.[61] After 108 days in detention, Ghosn was released on bail, but after 29 days he was again detained on new charges (4 April 2019). He had been due to hold a news conference, but instead, his lawyers released a video of Ghosn alleging this 2018-19 Nissan scandal is itself evidence of value destruction and Nissan corporate mismanagement.[62][63] In September 2019, Saikawa resigned as CEO, following allegations of improper payments received by him.[64] Yasuhiro Yamauchi was appointed as acting CEO.[65] In October 2019, the company announced it had appointed Makoto Uchida as its next CEO. The appointment would be made "effective" by 1 January 2020 at the latest.[66] On 1 December 2019, Uchida became CEO.[67]

In the U.S., Nissan has been increasing its reliance on sales to daily-rental companies like Enterprise Rent-A-Car or Hertz. In 2016, Nissan's rental sales jumped 37% and in 2017 Nissan became the only major automaker to boost rental sales when the Detroit Three cut back less profitable deliveries to daily-rental companies, which traditionally are the biggest customers of domestic automakers.[68]

In late July 2019, Nissan announced it would lay off 12,500 employees over the next 3 years, citing a 95% year on year net income fall. Hiroto Saikawa, CEO at the time, confirmed the majority of those cuts would be plant workers.[69]

In May 2020, Nissan announced that the company would cut production capacity by 20% due to the COVID-19 pandemic. In mid-2020, the company announced it would shut down factories in Indonesia and Spain, and would exit the South Korean car market.[70][71] Nissan announced that the Infiniti brand will be pulled out from South Korea as well alongside the Nissan brand by December due to worsening business environment amidst the pandemic and the 2019 boycott of Japanese products in South Korea.[72] Nissan announced that service centers will be managed to provide after-sales services such as vehicle quality assurance and parts management for eight years.[73] In November 2020, Nissan announced a $421 million loss in the last quarter due to the COVID-19 pandemic and the scandal concerning Ghosn.[74] According to a spokesperson of Nissan North America, the company had suffered from a strategy of "volume at any cost", which has been attributed by analysts to Ghosn.[75]

New technologies

Nissan's first final assembly robots were installed in the Murayama plant (where the then-new March/Micra was assembled) in 1982. In 1984 the Zama plant began to be robotized; this automation process then continued throughout Nissan's factories.[76]

Nissan electric vehicles have been produced intermittently since 1946. In 2010 the Nissan Leaf plug-in battery electric vehicle was introduced; it was the world's most sold plug-in electric car for nearly a decade. It was preceded by the Altra and the Hypermini. Until surpassed by Tesla, Nissan was the world's largest electric vehicle (EV) manufacturer, with global sales of more than 320,000 all-electric vehicles as of April 2018.[13]

Relationships with other car companies

 
Nissan main office
Ford Motor Company

In Australia, between 1989 and 1992, Nissan Australia shared models with Ford Australia under a government-backed rationalisation scheme known as the Button Plan, with a version of the Nissan Pintara being sold as the Ford Corsair and a version of the Ford Falcon as the Nissan Ute.[77] A variant of the Nissan Patrol was sold as the Ford Maverick during the 1988–94 model years.

In North America, Nissan partnered with Ford from 1993 to 2002 to market the Ohio-built Mercury Villager and the Nissan Quest. The two minivans were virtually identical aside from cosmetic differences. In 2002, Nissan and Ford announced the discontinuation of the arrangement.[78]

In Europe, Nissan and Ford Europe partnered to produce the Nissan Terrano II and the badge-engineered Ford Maverick, a mid-size SUV produced at the Nissan Motor Ibérica S.A (NMISA) plant in Barcelona, Spain. The Maverick/Terrano II was a popular vehicle sold throughout Europe and Australasia. It was also sold in Japan as a captive import, with the Nissan model marketed as the Nissan Mistral.

Volkswagen

Nissan licensed the Volkswagen Santana. Production began in 1984, at Nissan's Zama, Kanagawa plant,[79][80] and ended in May 1990.[81]

Alfa Romeo

From 1983 to 1987, Nissan cooperated with Alfa Romeo to build the Arna.[48] The goal was for Alfa to compete in the family hatchback market segment, and for Nissan to establish a foothold in the European market.[82] After Alfa Romeo's takeover by Fiat, both the car and cooperation were discontinued.

General Motors

In Europe, General Motors (GM) and Nissan co-operated on the Nissan Primastar, a light commercial vehicle. The high roof version is built in the NMISA plant in Barcelona, Spain; while the low roof version is built at Vauxhall Motors/Opel's Luton plant in Bedfordshire, UK.

In 2013, GM announced its intentions to rebadge the Nissan NV200 commercial van as the 2015 model year Chevrolet City Express, to be introduced by the end of 2014.[83] Holden, GM's Australian subsidiary, sold versions of the Nissan Pulsar as the Holden Astra between 1984 and 1989.[84]

LDV

LDV Group sold a badge-engineered light commercial vehicle version of the Nissan Serena as the LDV Cub from 1996 to 2001. The Nissan equivalent was marketed as the Nissan Vanette Cargo.

Alliance with Renault and Mitsubishi

 
Former CEO Carlos Ghosn has been credited with reviving Nissan.

In 1999, facing severe financial difficulties, Nissan entered an alliance with Renault of France.[55] Signed on 27 March 1999, the Renault-Nissan Alliance was the first of its kind involving a Japanese and French car manufacturer, each with its own distinct corporate culture and brand identity. Renault initially acquired a 36.8% stake in Nissan for $3.5 billion pending court approval and Nissan permanently vowed to buy into Renault when it was financially able. In 2001, after the company's turnaround from near-bankruptcy, Nissan acquired a 15% share of Renault, which in turn increased its stake in Nissan to 43.4%.[85]

The Renault-Nissan Alliance has evolved over the years to Renault holding 43.4% of Nissan shares, while Nissan holds 15% of Renault shares. The alliance itself is incorporated as the Renault-Nissan B.V., founded on 28 March 2002 under Dutch law. Renault-Nissan B.V. is equally owned by Renault and Nissan.[86]

On 7 April 2010, Daimler AG exchanged a 3.1% share of its holdings for 3.1% from both Nissan and Renault. This triple alliance allows for the increased sharing of technology and development costs, encouraging global cooperation and mutual development.[87]

On 12 December 2012, the Renault–Nissan Alliance formed a joint venture with Russian Technologies (Alliance Rostec Auto BV) with the aim of becoming the long-term controlling shareholder of AvtoVAZ, Russia's largest car company and owner of the country's biggest selling brand, Lada.[88] The takeover was completed in June 2014, and the two companies of the Renault-Nissan Alliance took a combined 67.1% stake of Alliance Rostec, which in turn acquired a 74.5% of AvtoVAZ, thereby giving Renault and Nissan indirect control over the Russian manufacturer.[89] Ghosn was appointed chairman of the board of AvtoVAZ on 27 June 2013.[90] In September 2017, Nissan sold its AvtoVAZ stake to Renault for 45 million.[91]

Taken together, in 2013 the Renault–Nissan Alliance sold one in ten cars worldwide, and would be the world's fourth largest automaker with sales of 8,266,098 units.[92]

Other alliances and joint ventures

 
A Nissan dealership in Glasgow, Scotland
  • In 2003, Nissan and Dongfeng Motor Group formed a 50:50 joint venture with the name Dongfeng Motor Co., Ltd. (DFL). The company calls itself "China's first automotive joint venture enterprise with a complete series of trucks, buses, light commercial vehicles and passenger vehicles," and "the largest joint-venture project of its scale."[93]
  • On 7 April 2010, Daimler AG exchanged a 3.1% share of its holdings for 3.1% from both Nissan and Renault. This triple alliance allows for the increased sharing of technology and development costs, encouraging global cooperation and mutual development.[87]
  • On 12 December 2012, the Renault–Nissan Alliance formed a joint venture with Russian Technologies (Alliance Rostec Auto BV) with the aim of becoming the long-term controlling shareholder of AvtoVAZ, Russia's largest car company and owner of the country's biggest selling brand, Lada.[88] Carlos Ghosn was appointed chairman of the board of AvtoVAZ on 27 June 2013.[94] Nissan exited the AvtoVAZ venture in September 2017.[95]
  • Nissan is in an alliance with Ashok Leyland in India, producing light commercial vehicles.[12]
  • Together with Mitsubishi Motors, Nissan develops mini cars which are produced at Mitsubishi's Mizushima plant in Kurashiki, Okayama, Japan under the NMKV joint venture.[12][96] In May 2016 Nissan bought a controlling stake in Mitsubishi Motors for an estimated US$2.3 billion.

Branding and corporate identity

Brands

Nissan: Nissan's volume models are sold worldwide under the Nissan brand.

Datsun: Until 1983, Nissan automobiles in most export markets were sold under the Datsun brand. In 1984 the Datsun brand was phased out and the Nissan brand was phased in. All cars in 1984 had both the Datsun and Nissan branding on them and in 1985 the Datsun name was completely dropped. In July 2013, Nissan relaunched Datsun as a brand targeted at emerging markets. However, due to sluggish sales, Nissan ended sales of Datsun-badged vehicles in 2022.[97][98]

Infiniti: Since 1989, Nissan has sold its luxury models under the Infiniti brand. In 2012, Infiniti changed its headquarters to Hong Kong, where it is incorporated as Infiniti Global Limited. Its president is former BMW executive Roland Krueger. From 2014 to 2020, the Japanese-market Skyline (rebadged Infiniti Q50) and Fuga (rebadged Infiniti Q70) were sold with Infiniti emblem.[99]

Nismo: Nissan's in-house tuning shop is Nismo, short for "Nissan Motorsport International Limited." Nismo is being re-positioned as Nissan's performance brand.[100][101]

Corporate identity

 
Carlos Ghosn in front of new CI at the 2013 earnings press conference in Yokohama

For many years, Nissan used a red wordmark for the company, and car "badges" for the "Nissan" and "Infiniti" brands.[102]

At Nissan's 2013 earnings press conference in Yokohama, Nissan unveiled "a new steel-blue logo that spells out—literally—the distinction between Nissan the company and Nissan the brand."[103] Using a blue-gray color scheme, the new corporate logo did read NISSAN MOTOR COMPANY. Underneath were the "badge" logos for the Nissan, Infiniti and Datsun brands.

Later in 2013, the Nissan "Company" logo changed to the Nissan "Corporation" logo. The latter was the logo used by Nissan Motor Co., Ltd.[104] up to early 2020.

In July 2020, Nissan introduced new corporate and brand logos, as part of an image revamp tied to the Ariya launch.[105]

Products

 
At the NISMO shop, in Tsurumi-ku, Yokohama, Japan

Automotive products

Nissan has produced an extensive range of mainstream cars and trucks, initially for domestic consumption but exported around the world since the 1950s.

It also produced several memorable sports cars, including the Datsun Fairlady 1500, 1600 and 2000 Roadsters, the Z-car, an affordable sports car originally introduced in 1969; and the GT-R, a powerful all-wheel-drive sports coupe.

In 1985, Nissan created a tuning division, Nismo, for competition and performance development of such cars. One of Nismo's latest models is the 370Z Nismo.

Nissan also sells a range of kei cars, mainly as a joint venture with other Japanese manufacturers like Suzuki or Mitsubishi. Until 2013, Nissan rebadged kei cars built by other manufacturers. Beginning in 2013, Nissan and Mitsubishi shared the development of the Nissan DAYZ / Mitsubishi eK Wagon series.[96] Nissan also has shared model development of Japanese domestic cars with other manufacturers, particularly Mazda, Subaru, Suzuki and Isuzu.

In China, Nissan produces cars in association with the Dongfeng Motor Group including the 2006 Nissan Livina Geniss, the first in a range of a new worldwide family of medium-sized cars.

In 2010, Nissan created another tuning division, IPL, this time for their premium/luxury brand Infiniti.

In 2011, after Nissan released the Nissan NV-Series in the United States, Canada, and Mexico, Nissan created a commercial sub-brand called Nissan Commercial Vehicles which focuses on commercial vans, pickup trucks, and fleet vehicles for the US, Canadian, and Mexican Markets.[106]

In 2013, Nissan launched the Qashqai SUV in South Africa, along with their new motorsport Qashqai Car Games.[when?] It is the same year when the Datsun brand was relaunched by Nissan after a 27-year hiatus.[107]

Nissan launched their Nissan Intelligent Mobility vision in 2016 by revealing the IDS Concept at the 2016 Geneva Motor Show.[108] Most Nissan vehicles like the Dayz, Rogue and Leaf are equipped with Nissan Intelligent Mobility technology.

In 2018, Nissan launched the sixth-generation Altima at the 2018 New York Auto Show.[109]

Japan

 
A Nissan dealership in Nagano
 
Nissan Red and Blue Stage dealership Nagano (2009)

As of 2007 in Japan, Nissan sells its products with internationally recognized "Nissan" signage, using a chrome circle with "Nissan" across the front.

Previously, Nissan used two dealership names called "Nissan Blue Stage" (ja:日産・ブルーステージ, Nissan Burū Sutēji), "Nissan Red Stage" (ja:日産・レッドステージ, Nissan Reddo Sutēji), and "Nissan Red and Blue Stage" (ja:日産・レッド&ブルーステージ, Nissan Reddo & Burū Sutēji), established in 1999 after forming an alliance with Renault. Renault also exported cars to Japan and were available at "Nissan Red Stage" locations, and are still available at Nissan Japanese dealerships.

Nissan Red Stage was the result of combining an older sales channel of dealerships under the names "Nissan Prince Store" (ja:日産・プリンス店, Nissan Purinsu-ten), established in 1966 after the merger of Prince Motors by Nissan, which sold the Nissan Skyline. "Nissan Satio Store" (日産・サティオ店, Nissan Satio-ten) sold cars developed from the Nissan Sunny at its introduction in 1966. The word "satio" is Latin, which means ample or sufficient. "Nissan Cherry Store" (日産・チェリー店, Nissan Cherī-ten) was briefly known previously as "Nissan Cony Store" when they assumed operations of a small kei manufacturer called Aichi Machine Industry Co., Ltd. (愛知機械工業) who manufactured the "Cony", "Guppy" and "Giant" brand of kei cars and trucks until 1970, when the network was renamed for the Nissan Cherry.[110]

Nissan Blue Stage was the result of combining older sales channels, called "Nissan Store" (ja:日産店, Nissan Mise) in 1955, then renamed "Nissan Bluebird Store" in 1966, selling Nissan's original post-war products called the Datsun Bluebird, Datsun Sports, Datsun Truck, Datsun Cablight, Datsun Cabstar, Nissan Junior and the Nissan Patrol. "Nissan Motor Store" (日産・モーター店, Nissan Mōtā-ten) was originally called "Nissan Cedric Store" when the Nissan Cedric was introduced in 1960, then renamed "Nissan Motor Store" in 1965 and offered luxury sedans like the Nissan President and the former Prince Motor Company developed Nissan Laurel. In 1970, Nissan also set up a separate sales chain which sold used cars including auctions, called Nissan U-Cars (ja:日産ユーズドカーセンター, Nissan Yūzudo Kā Sentā), which they still maintain.

In the early days of Nissan's dealership network, Japanese consumers were directed towards specific Nissan stores for cars that were of a specific size and pricepoint. Over time as sales progressed and the Japanese automotive industry became more prolific, vehicles that were dedicated to particular stores were badge engineered, given different names, and shared within the existing networks thereby selling the same platforms at different locations. The networks allowed Nissan to better compete with the network established earlier by Toyota at Japanese locations. Starting in 1960, another sales distribution channel was established that sold diesel products for commercial use, called Nissan Diesel until the diesel division was sold in 2007 to Volvo AB. To encourage retail sales, Nissan passenger vehicles that were installed with diesel engines, like the Cedric, were available at Nissan Diesel locations.

All cars sold at Nissan Blue Stage (1999–2005):

Fairlady Z, Serena, Cedric, Liberty, Cefiro, Laurel, President, Bluebird, Presage, Presea, Terrano, Leopard, Avenir, Nissan Truck, Safari, Hypermini, Caravan, Murano

All cars sold at Nissan Store (later Nissan Bluebird Store, Nissan Exhibition), Nissan Motor Store, (1955–1999):

Liberta Villa, Bluebird, C80, Caball, Datsun Junior, Datsun Truck, Cabstar, Caravan, Civilian, Patrol, Datsun Sports, Leopard, Maxima, Fairlady Z, Gazelle, Terrano, Avenir, Cefiro, Laurel, Laurel Spirit, Prairie, Cedric, President

All cars sold at Nissan Red Stage (1999–2005):

X-Trail. Teana, Cima, Sylphy, Crew, Skyline, Civilian, Silvia, Tino, Gloria, Pulsar, Sunny, R'nessa, Rasheen, Bassara, Primera, Mistral, Stagea, ADvan, Cube, Largo, Vanette, Clipper, Homy, Elgrand, Safari, Wingroad, Atlas, Murano, Renault Twingo, Renault Symbol, Renault Clio, Renault Mégane, Renault Kangoo

All cars sold at Nissan Prince Store, Nissan Satio Store, Nissan Cherry Store (1966–1999):

Cima, Gloria, Skyline, Primera, Auster, Stanza, Violet, Pulsar, Pulsar EXA, NX, Langley, Volkswagen Santana, Volkswagen Passat, 180SX, Safari, Mistral, Elgrand, Homy, Bassara, Largo, Serena, Stagea, Wingroad, Expert, AD van, Vanette, Clipper, Atlas, Homer (cabover truck), Cherry, Sunny, Lucino, Cherry Vanette, Be-1, Pao, Figaro, S-Cargo

Nissan has classified several vehicles as "premium" and select dealerships offer the "Nissan Premium Factory" catalog. Vehicles in this category are:

Skyline, Fuga, Cima, Fairlady Z, Murano, and the Elgrand.[111]

Trucks

Nissan Cabstar

Nissan Cabstar (日産・キャブスター Nissan Kyabusutā) is the name used in Japan for two lines of pickup trucks and light commercial vehicles sold by Nissan and built by UD Nissan Diesel, a Volvo AB company and by Renault-Nissan Alliance for the European market. The name originated with the 1968 Datsun Cabstar, but this was gradually changed over to "Nissan" badging in the early 1980s. The lighter range (1-1.5 tons) replaced the earlier Cabstar and Homer, while the heavier Caball and Clipper were replaced by the 2–4 ton range Atlas (日産・アトラス Nissan Atorasu). The nameplate was first introduced in December 1981. The Cabstar is known also as the Nissan Cabstar, Renault Maxity and Samsung SV110 depending on the location. The range has been sold across the world. It shares its platform with the Nissan Caravan.

Nissan Titan

 
2019 Nissan Titan XD Pro-4X

The Nissan Titan was introduced in 2004, as a full-size pickup truck produced for the North American market, the truck shares the stretched Nissan F-Alpha platform with the Nissan Armada and Infiniti QX56 SUVs. It was listed by Edmunds.com as the best full-size truck.[112][113] The second-generation Titan was revealed at the 2015 North American International Auto Show as a 2016 model year vehicle.

Japan

The first Cabstar (A320) appeared in March 1968, as a replacement for the earlier Datsun Cablight. It is a cab-over engine truck and was available either as a truck, light van (glazed van), or as a "route van" (bus). It uses the 1189 cc Nissan D12 engine with 56 PS (41 kW). After some modifications and the new 1.3 liter J13 engine, with 67 PS (49 kW), in August 1970 the code became A321. The Cabstar underwent another facelift with an entirely new front clip in May 1973. The 1483 cc J15 engine became standard fitment at this time (PA321), with 77 PS (57 kW) at 5200 rpm. The Cabstar was placed just beneath the slightly bigger Homer range in Nissan's commercial vehicle lineup. It received a full makeover in January 1976, although the van models were not replaced.

Second generation

The F20 Nissan Homer, introduced in January 1976, was also sold as the Nissan Datsun Cabstar in Japan. Both ranges were sold with either a 1.5 (J15) or a 2.0 liter (H20) petrol inline-four or with the 2.2 liter SD22 diesel engine. The F20 received a desmogged engine range in September 1979 and with it a new chassis code, F21. Manufacturing of the heavier range (H40-series) Atlas began in December 1981, while the lighter series Atlas (F22) was introduced in February 1982 – this succeeded both the Homer and Cabstar ranges and the nameplate has not been used in the Japanese market since.

Europe

The Atlas F22 was sold in Europe as the Nissan Cabstar and proved a popular truck in the UK market due to its reliability and ability to carry weight. From 1990 the range widened and was sold as the Cabstar E. Actually (2015) the Cabstar is manufactured in the NSIO (Nissan Spanish Industrial Operations) Plant in Ávila, Spain under the brand name of NT400.

Electric vehicles

 
2018 Nissan Leaf at an electric charging station

Nissan introduced its first battery electric vehicle, the Nissan Altra at the Los Angeles International Auto Show on 29 December 1997.[114] Unveiled in 2009, the EV-11 prototype electric car was based on the Nissan Tiida (Versa in North America), with the conventional gasoline engine replaced with an all-electric drivetrain.[115]

In 2010, Nissan introduced the Nissan LEAF as the first mass-market, all-electric vehicle launched globally.[116] As of March 2014, the Nissan Leaf was the world's best selling highway-capable all-electric car ever.[117][118] Global sales totaled 100,000 Leafs by mid January 2014, representing a 45% market share of worldwide pure electric vehicles sold since 2010.[117] Global Leaf sales passed the 200,000 unit milestone in December 2015, and the Leaf continued ranking as the all-time best selling all-electric car.[119][120]

Nissan's second all-electric vehicle, the Nissan e-NV200, was announced in November 2013.[121] Series production at the Nissan Plan in Barcelona, Spain, began on 7 May 2014.[122] The e-NV200 commercial van is based on the Nissan Leaf. Nissan plans to launch two additional battery electric vehicles by March 2017.[123]

In June 2016, Nissan announced it will introduce its first range extender car in Japan before March 2017. The series plug-in hybrid will use a new hybrid system, dubbed e-Power, which debuted with the Nissan Gripz concept crossover showcased at the September 2015 Frankfurt Auto Show.[124] As of August 2016, Nissan electric vehicles were sold in 48 world markets.[125] Nissan global electric vehicle sales passed 275,000 units in December 2016.[13]

The second-generation Leaf was launched by Nissan in Japan in 2018. By December 2020, global deliveries totaled 500,000 Leaf cars, 10 years after its introduction.[126]

Autonomous cars

 
Nissan autonomous car prototype technology was fitted on a Nissan Leaf all-electric car.

In August 2013 Nissan announced its plans to launch several driverless cars by 2020. The company is building a dedicated autonomous driving proving ground in Japan, to be completed in 2014. Nissan installed its autonomous car technology in a Nissan Leaf all-electric car for demonstration purposes. The car was demonstrated at Nissan 360 test drive event held in California in August 2013.[127][128] In September 2013, the Leaf fitted with the prototype Advanced Driver Assistance System was granted a license plate that allows it to drive on Japanese public roads. The testing car will be used by Nissan engineers to evaluate how its in-house autonomous driving software performs in the real world. Time spent on public roads will help refine the car's software for fully automated driving.[129] The autonomous Leaf was demonstrated on public roads for the first time at a media event held in Japan in November 2013. The Leaf drove on the Sagami Expressway in Kanagawa Prefecture, near Tokyo. Nissan vice chairman Toshiyuki Shiga and the prefecture's governor, Yuji Kuroiwa, rode in the car during the test.[130][131]

Non-automotive products

Nissan has also had a number of ventures outside the automotive industry, most notably the Tu–Ka mobile phone service (est. 1994), which was sold to DDI and Japan Telecom (both now merged into KDDI) in 1999. Nissan offers a subscription-based telematics service in select vehicles to drivers in Japan, called CarWings. Nissan also owns Nissan Marine, a joint venture with Tohatsu Corp that produces motors for smaller boats and other maritime equipment.

Nissan also built solid rocket motors for orbital launch vehicles such as the Lambda 4S and M-V.[132][133] The aerospace and defense division of Nissan was sold to IHI Corporation in 2000.[134]

Marketing activities

Nismo is the motorsports division of Nissan, founded in 1984. Nismo cars have participated in the All Japan Sports Prototype Championship, Super GT, IMSA GT Championship, World Sportscar Championship, FIA World Endurance Championship, British Touring Car Championship, Supercars Championship and Blancpain GT Series. Also, they were featured at the World Series by Nissan from 1998 to 2004.

Nissan sponsored the Los Angeles Open golf tournament from 1987 to 2007.

Beginning in 2015, Nissan became the naming rights sponsor for Nissan Stadium, the home of the Tennessee Titans and Tennessee State University football teams in Nashville.[135] Nissan also became the official sponsor of the Heisman Trophy and UEFA Champions League.[136] Since 2019, Nissan has been the naming rights sponsor for Nissan Arena, the home of the Brisbane Bullets basketball team and Queensland Firebirds netball team in Brisbane, Australia.[137]

Global sales figures

Top 10 Nissan vehicle sales
by country, 2018[138]
Rank Location Vehicle
sales
1   China 1,563,986
2   United States 1,493,877
3   Japan 615,966
4   Mexico 314,123
5   Canada 149,117
6   United Kingdom 116,914
7   Russia 106,138
8   Brazil 97,512
9   Spain 72,943
10   Thailand 72,394
Sales by calendar year
Year Global sales
2010 4,080,588[139]
2011 4,669,981[140]
2012 4,940,181[141]
2013 5,102,979[142]
2014 5,310,064[143]
2015 5,421,804[144]
2016 5,559,902[145]
2017 5,816,278[146]
2018 5,653,683[147]
2019 5,176,189[148]
2020 4,029,166[149]
2021 4,065,014[150]

Research and development

Nissan's central research[151] is inside the Oppama Plant site, Yokosuka, which began its operation in 1961, at the former site of Imperial Japanese Navy's Airborne Squadron base. In 1982, Nissan's technical centers in Suginami, Tokyo and Tsurumi, Yokohama were combined into one: Nissan Technical Center (NTC) in Atsugi, Kanagawa, at the foot of Mount Ōyama of the Tanzawa Mountains. At its 30th anniversary in 2012, NTC employed 9,500 employees in product development, design, production engineering, and purchasing.

Nissan Technical Center works closely with its overseas operations: Nissan Technical Center (NTC)/North America,[152] NTC/Mexico, Nissan Design America, and Nissan Silicon Valley Office.

In 2007, the company opened Nissan Advanced Technology Center (NATC), near the NTC site. It works in close contact with the central research, the Silicon Valley office, the technical office near the Nissan headquarters in central Yokohama, and the overseas offices in Detroit, Silicon Valley, and Moscow.[153]

Nissan's test courses are in Tochigi (two courses), Yokosuka and Hokkaido.

Nissan Digital Hubs

In mid- 2018, Nissan launched its first of many planned software and information technology development centers in Thiruvananthapuram, Kerala, India.[154]

Manufacturing locations

Data extracted from Nissan's international corporate website.[155]

 
World locations of Nissan Motor factories as of 2013[156]

East Asia

Southeast Asia

South Asia

Oceania

Americas

Africa

Europe

See also

Notes

  1. ^ US: /ˈnsɑːn/, UK: /ˈnɪsæn/, AU/NZ: /ˈnɪsən/; Japanese pronunciation: [ɲissaɴ].

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Bibliography

  • Cusumano, Michael A. (1985). The Japanese Automobile Industry. Harvard University Press. ISBN 0-674-47255-1.

External links

  • Official website

nissan, this, article, about, multinational, automobile, manufacturer, other, uses, disambiguation, confused, with, nisan, nissae, motor, japanese, 日産自動車株式会社, hepburn, jidōsha, kabushiki, gaisha, trading, motor, corporation, often, shortened, japanese, multina. This article is about the multinational automobile manufacturer For other uses see Nissan disambiguation Not to be confused with Nisan or Nissae Nissan Motor Co Ltd Japanese 日産自動車株式会社 Hepburn Nissan Jidōsha kabushiki gaisha trading as Nissan Motor Corporation and often shortened to Nissan a is a Japanese multinational automobile manufacturer headquartered in Nishi ku Yokohama Japan The company sells its vehicles under the Nissan and Infiniti brands and formerly the Datsun brand with in house performance tuning products including cars labelled Nismo The company traces back to the beginnings of the 20th century with the Nissan zaibatsu now called Nissan Group Nissan Motor Co Ltd Headquarters in Nishi ku YokohamaTrade nameNissan Motor CorporationNative name日産自動車株式会社Romanized nameNissan Jidōsha kabushiki gaishaTypePublic Kabushiki gaisha Traded asTYO 7201 Nikkei 225 component 7201 TOPIX Core30 component 7201 IndustryAutomotiveFounded26 December 1933 89 years ago 1933 12 26 under Nissan Group 1 2 FoundersMasujiro Hashimoto 3 DAT line Kenjiro Den Rokuro Aoyama Meitaro Takeuchi Yoshisuke Aikawa William R GorhamHeadquartersNishi ku Yokohama Japan Officially registered in Kanagawa ku Yokohama Kanagawa Prefecture Area servedWorldwideKey peopleYasushi Kimura Chairman Makoto Uchida President amp CEO Ashwani Gupta COO ProductsAutomobiles luxury vehicles commercial vehicles outboard motors forklift trucksProduction output4 757 000 units 2020 4 Revenue 9 878 trillion FY 2020 5 US 90 863 billion 6 Operating income 40 5 billion FY 2020 5 Net income 671 2 billion FY 2020 5 US 6 173 billion 6 Total assets 16 97 trillion FY 2020 5 US 153 09 billion 6 Total equity 4 42 trillion FY 2020 5 US 50 057 billion 6 OwnerRenault 43 7 cross ownership Number of employees136 134 2020 7 DivisionsNissanInfinitiNismoDatsun discontinued SubsidiariesList Transportation Nissan Commercial VehiclesDongfeng Motor Co Ltd 50 Nissan Shatai 43 Mitsubishi Motors 34 Renault 15 NMKV 50 Other Nissan TechnoAutechJatcoInternational Nissan USAWebsiteOfficial websiteSince 1999 Nissan has been part of the Renault Nissan Mitsubishi Alliance Mitsubishi joining in 2016 a partnership between Nissan and Mitsubishi Motors of Japan with Renault of France As of 2013 update Renault holds a 43 4 voting stake in Nissan while Nissan holds a 15 non voting stake in Renault Since October 2016 Nissan has held a 34 controlling stake in Mitsubishi Motors 8 In 2013 Nissan was the sixth largest automaker in the world after Toyota General Motors Volkswagen Group Hyundai Motor Group and Ford 9 In 2014 Nissan was the largest car manufacturer in North America 10 With a revenue of 80 billion in 2022 Nissan was the 10th largest automobile maker in the world 11 as well as being the leading Japanese brand in China Russia and Mexico 12 As of April 2018 update Nissan was the world s largest electric vehicle EV manufacturer with global sales of more than 320 000 all electric vehicles 13 The top selling vehicle of the car maker s fully electric lineup is the Nissan LEAF the No 2 top selling electric car globally just behind the Tesla Model 3 14 Contents 1 Introduction 1 1 Beginnings of Datsun brand name from 1914 1 2 Nissan name first used in 1930s 1 3 Nissan Motor organized in 1934 1 4 Nissan s early American connection 1 5 Austin Motor Company relations 1937 1960s 1 6 100 Day Strike of 1953 1 7 Merger with Prince Motor Company 1 8 Miss Fairlady 1 9 Foreign expansion 1 10 Alliance with Renault 1 11 New technologies 1 12 Relationships with other car companies 1 13 Alliance with Renault and Mitsubishi 1 14 Other alliances and joint ventures 2 Branding and corporate identity 2 1 Brands 2 2 Corporate identity 3 Products 3 1 Automotive products 3 1 1 Japan 3 2 Trucks 3 2 1 Nissan Cabstar 3 2 2 Nissan Titan 3 3 Electric vehicles 3 4 Autonomous cars 3 5 Non automotive products 4 Marketing activities 5 Global sales figures 6 Research and development 6 1 Nissan Digital Hubs 7 Manufacturing locations 7 1 East Asia 7 2 Southeast Asia 7 3 South Asia 7 4 Oceania 7 5 Americas 7 6 Africa 7 7 Europe 8 See also 9 Notes 10 References 11 Bibliography 12 External linksIntroduction EditSee also List of Nissan vehicles Beginnings of Datsun brand name from 1914 Edit Datsun Type 11 Masujiro Hashimoto 橋本増治郎 founded the Kwaishinsha Kaishinsha Motor Car Works 快進社自働車工場 Kwaishinsha jidōsha kōjō A Good Company Automobile Manufacturer on 1 July 1911 in Azabu Hiroo district of Tokyo In 1914 the company produced its first car called the DAT 3 1 2 The new car s model name was an acronym of the company s investors surnames Kenjiro Den Den Kenjirō Rokuro Aoyama Aoyama Rokurō Meitaro Takeuchi Takeuchi Meitarō It was renamed to Kaishinsha Motorcar Co Ltd in 1918 and again to DAT Jidosha amp Co Ltd DAT Motorcar Co in 1925 DAT Motors built trucks in addition to the DAT and Datsun passenger cars The vast majority of its output were trucks due to an almost non existent consumer market for passenger cars at the time and disaster recovery efforts as a result of the 1923 Great Kantō earthquake Beginning in 1918 the first DAT trucks were produced for the military market At the same time Jitsuyo Jidosha Co Ltd jitsuyo means practical use or utility produced small trucks using parts and materials imported from the United States 15 better source needed Commercial operations were placed on hold during Japan s participation in World War I and the company contributed to the war effort In 1926 the Tokyo based DAT Motors merged with the Osaka based Jitsuyo Jidosha Co Ltd Jitsuyō Jidōsha Seizō Kabushiki Gaisha a k a Jitsuyo Jidosha Seizo established 1919 as a Kubota subsidiary to become DAT Jidosha Seizo Co Ltd Automobile Manufacturing Co Ltd ダット自動車製造株式会社 DAT Jidōsha Seizō Kabushiki Gaisha in Osaka until 1932 From 1923 to 1925 the company produced light cars and trucks under the name of Lila 16 In 1929 DAT Automobile Manufacturing Inc merged with a separated part of the manufacturing business of IHI Corporation to become Automobile Industries Co Ltd clarification needed In 1931 DAT came out with a new smaller car called the Datsun Type 11 the first Datson meaning Son of DAT Later in 1933 after Nissan Group zaibatsu took control of DAT Motors the last syllable of Datson was changed to sun because son also means loss in Japanese hence the name Datsun ダットサン Dattosan 17 In 1933 the company name was Nipponized to Jidosha Seizo Co Ltd Jidōsha Seizō Kabushiki Gaisha Automobile Manufacturing Share Company and was moved to Yokohama Nissan name first used in 1930s Edit In 1928 Yoshisuke Aikawa nickname Gisuke Guisuke Ayukawa founded the holding company Nihon Sangyo 日本産業 Japan Industries or Nihon Industries The name Nissan originated during the 1930s as an abbreviation 18 used on the Tokyo Stock Exchange for Nihon Sangyo This company was Nissan Zaibatsu which included Tobata Casting and Hitachi At this time Nissan controlled foundries and auto parts businesses but Aikawa did not enter automobile manufacturing until 1933 19 The zaibatsu eventually grew to include 74 firms and became the fourth largest in Japan during World War II 20 In 1931 DAT Jidosha Seizo became affiliated with Tobata Casting and was merged into Tobata Casting in 1933 As Tobata Casting was a Nissan company this was the beginning of Nissan s automobile manufacturing 21 Nissan Motor organized in 1934 Edit In 1934 Aikawa separated the expanded automobile parts division of Tobata Casting and incorporated it as a new subsidiary which he named Nissan Motor Co Ltd 日産自動車 Nissan Jidōsha 22 The shareholders of the new company however were not enthusiastic about the prospects of the automobile in Japan so Aikawa bought out all the Tobata Casting shareholders using capital from Nihon Industries in June 1934 At this time Nissan Motor effectively became owned by Nihon Sangyo and Hitachi 23 In 1935 the construction of its Yokohama plant was completed 44 Datsuns were shipped to Asia Central and South America In 1935 the first car manufactured by an integrated assembly system rolled off the line at the Yokohama plant 15 Nissan built trucks airplanes and engines for the Imperial Japanese Army In November 1937 Nissan moved its headquarters to Hsinking the capital of Manchukuo In December the company changed its name to Manchuria Heavy Industries Developing Co MHID 24 25 In 1940 the first knockdown kits were shipped to Dowa Jidosha Kogyo Dowa Automobile one of MHID s companies for assembly 15 In 1944 the head office was moved to Nihonbashi Tokyo and the company name was changed to Nissan Heavy Industries Ltd which the company kept through 1949 15 Nissan s early American connection Edit The Graham Paige based Nissan Model 70 sedan DAT had inherited Kubota s chief designer American engineer William R Gorham This along with Aikawa s 1908 visit to Detroit was to greatly affect Nissan s future 15 26 Although it had always been Aikawa s intention to use cutting edge auto making technology from America it was Gorham that carried out the plan Most of the machinery and processes originally came from the United States When Nissan started to assemble larger vehicles under the Nissan brand in 1937 much of the design plans and plant facilities were supplied by the Graham Paige Company 22 Nissan also had a Graham license under which passenger cars buses and trucks were made 26 In his 1986 book The Reckoning David Halberstam states In terms of technology Gorham was the founder of the Nissan Motor Company and that young Nissan engineers who had never met him spoke of him as a god and could describe in detail his years at the company and his many inventions 27 Austin Motor Company relations 1937 1960s Edit 1937 Datsun model 16 Austin Seven Ruby From 1934 Datsun began to build Austin 7s under license This operation became the greatest success of Austin s overseas licensing of its Seven and marked the beginning of Datsun s international success citation needed In 1952 Nissan entered into a legal agreement with Austin 28 29 for Nissan to assemble 2 000 Austins from imported partially assembled sets and sell them in Japan under the Austin trademark The agreement called for Nissan to make all Austin parts locally within three years a goal Nissan met Nissan produced and marketed Austins for seven years The agreement also gave Nissan the rights to use Austin patents which Nissan used in developing its own engines for its Datsun line of cars In 1953 British built Austins were assembled and sold but by 1955 the Austin A50 completely built by Nissan and featuring a new 1489 cc engine was on the market in Japan Nissan produced 20 855 Austins from 1953 to 1959 30 Nissan leveraged the Austin patents to further develop its own modern engine designs beyond what Austin s A and B family designs offered The apex of the Austin derived engines was the new design A series engine in 1966 In 1967 Nissan introduced its new highly advanced four cylinder overhead cam OHC Nissan L engine which while similar to Mercedes Benz OHC designs was a totally new engine designed by Nissan This engine powered the new Datsun 510 which gained Nissan respect in the worldwide sedan market Then in 1969 Nissan introduced the Datsun 240Z sports car which used a six cylinder variation of the L series engine developed under Nissan Machinery Nissan Koki Co Ltd 日産工機 in 1964 a former remnant of another auto manufacturer Kurogane The 240Z was an immediate sensation and lifted Nissan to world class status in the automobile market 31 100 Day Strike of 1953 Edit 1953 Nissan labor dispute During the Korean War Nissan was a major vehicle producer for the U S Army 32 After the Korean War ended significant levels of anti communist sentiment existed in Japan The union that organized Nissan s workforce was strong and militant 32 33 Nissan was in financial difficulties and when wage negotiations came the company took a hard line Workers were locked out and several hundred were fired The Japanese government and the U S occupation forces arrested several union leaders 32 The union ran out of strike funds and was defeated A new labor union was formed 34 with Shioji Ichiro one of its leaders Ichiro had studied at Harvard University on a U S government scholarship He advanced an idea to trade wage cuts against saving 2 000 jobs 35 Ichiro s idea was made part of a new union contract 35 that prioritized productivity Between 1955 and 1973 Nissan expanded rapidly on the basis of technical advances supported and often suggested by the union Ichiro became president of the Confederation of Japan Automobile Workers Unions and the most influential figure in the right wing of the Japanese labor movement 32 Merger with Prince Motor Company Edit 1966 Prince R380 racecar In 1966 Nissan merged with the Prince Motor Company bringing more upmarket cars including the Skyline and Gloria into its selection The Prince name was eventually abandoned and successive Skylines and Glorias bore the Nissan name Prince was used at the Japanese Nissan dealership Nissan Prince Shop until 1999 when Nissan Red Stage replaced it Nissan Red Stage itself has been replaced as of 2007 The Skyline lives on as the G Series of Infiniti Miss Fairlady Edit To capitalize on the renewed investment during 1964 Summer Olympics Nissan established the gallery on the second and third floors of the San ai building located in Ginza Tokyo To attract visitors Nissan started using beautiful female showroom attendants where Nissan held a competition to choose five candidates as the first class of Nissan Miss Fairladys modeled after Datsun Demonstrators from the 1930s who introduced cars The Fairlady name was used as a link to the popular Broadway play My Fair Lady of the era Miss Fairladys became the marketers of the Datsun Fairlady 1500 36 37 38 In April 2008 14 more Miss Fairlady candidates were added for a total of 45 Nissan Miss Fairlady pageants 22 in Ginza 8 in Sapporo 7 in Nagoya 7 in Fukuoka 39 In April 2012 7 more Miss Fairlady candidates were added for a total of 48 Nissan Miss Fairlady pageants 26 in Ginza 8 in Sapporo 7 in Nagoya 7 in Fukuoka 40 In April 2013 6 more Miss Fairlady candidates were added to Ginza showroom for a total of 27 48th Ginza Nissan Miss Fairlady pageants 41 Foreign expansion Edit 1971 Datsun 240Z U S model in green metallic In the 1950s Nissan decided to expand into worldwide markets Nissan management realized their Datsun small car line would fill an unmet need in markets such as Australia and the world s largest car market the United States They first showed the Datsun Bluebird at the 1958 Los Angeles Auto Show 15 42 The company formed a U S subsidiary Nissan Motor Corporation U S A in Gardena California 43 in 1960 headed by Yutaka Katayama 15 Nissan continued to improve its sedans with the latest technological advancements and chic Italianate styling in sporty cars such as the Datsun Fairlady roadsters the race winning 411 series the Datsun 510 and the Datsun 240Z By 1970 Nissan had become one of the world s largest exporters of automobiles 44 In the wake of the 1973 oil crisis consumers worldwide especially in the lucrative U S market began turning to high quality small economy cars To meet the growing demand for its new Nissan Sunny the company built new factories in Mexico Nissan Mexicana was established in the early 1960s and commenced manufacturing in 1966 at the Cuernavaca assembly facility making it Nissan s first North American assembly plant Australia New Zealand Taiwan United States Nissan Motor Manufacturing Corporation USA was established in 1980 and South Africa The Chicken Tax of 1964 placed a 25 tax on commercial vans imported to the United States 45 In response Nissan Toyota Motor Corp and Honda Motor Co began building plants in the U S in the early 1980s 45 Nissan s initial assembly plant Smyrna assembly plant which broke ground in 1980 at first built only trucks such as the 720 and Hardbody but has since expanded to produce several car and SUV lines including the Altima Maxima Rogue Pathfinder Infiniti QX60 and LEAF all electric car The addition of mass market automobiles was in response to the 1981 Voluntary Export Restraints imposed by the U S Government An engine plant in Decherd Tennessee followed most recently a second assembly plant was established in Canton Mississippi In 1970 Teocar was created which was a Greek assembly plant created in cooperation with Theoharakis 46 It was situated in Volos Greece and its geographical location was perfect as the city had a major port The plant started production in 1980 assembling Datsun pick up trucks and continuing with the Nissan Cherry and Sunny automobiles Until May 1995 170 000 vehicles were made mainly for Greece By the early 1980s Nissan Datsun had long been the best selling Japanese brand in Europe 47 In order to overcome export tariffs and delivery costs to its European customers Nissan contemplated establishing a plant in Europe Nissan tried to convert the Greek plant into one manufacturing cars for all European countries citation needed However due to issues with the Greek government citation needed not only did that not happen but the plant itself was closed A joint venture with Italy s then state owned Alfa Romeo was also entered in 1980 leading to Italian production of the Nissan Cherry and an Alfa badged and motorized version the Alfa Romeo Arna 48 After an extensive review Nissan decided to go it alone instead The City of Sunderland in the north east of England was chosen for its skilled workforce and its location near major ports The plant was completed in 1986 as the subsidiary Nissan Motor Manufacturing UK Ltd By 2007 it was producing 400 000 vehicles per year landing it the title of the most productive plant in Europe 2013 Nissan GT R In 2001 Nissan established a manufacturing plant in Brazil In 2005 Nissan added operations in India through its subsidiary Nissan Motor India Pvt Ltd 49 With its global alliance partner Renault Nissan invested 990 million to set up a manufacturing facility in Chennai catering to the Indian market as well as a base for exports of small cars to Europe 50 51 Nissan entered the Middle East market in 1957 when it sold its first car in Saudi Arabia 52 Nissan sold nearly 520 000 new vehicles in China in 2009 in a joint venture with Dongfeng Motor To meet increased production targets Dongfeng Nissan expanded its production base in Guangzhou which would become Nissan s largest factory around the globe in terms of production capacity 53 Nissan also has moved and expanded its Nissan Americas Inc headquarters moving from Los Angeles to Franklin Tennessee in the Nashville area 54 Alliance with Renault Edit In 1999 facing severe financial difficulties Nissan entered an alliance with Renault of France 55 In June 2001 Renault executive Carlos Ghosn was named chief executive officer of Nissan In May 2005 Ghosn was named president of Nissan s partner company Renault He was appointed president and CEO of Renault on 6 May 2009 56 Under CEO Ghosn s Nissan Revival Plan NRP the company has rebounded in what many leading economists consider to be one of the most spectacular corporate turnarounds in history catapulting Nissan to record profits and a dramatic revitalization of both its Nissan and Infiniti model line ups 57 58 Ghosn has been recognized in Japan for the company s turnaround in the midst of an ailing Japanese economy Ghosn and the Nissan turnaround were featured in Japanese manga and popular culture His achievements in revitalizing Nissan were noted by the Japanese government which awarded him the Japan Medal with Blue Ribbon in 2004 59 In February 2017 Ghosn announced he would step down as CEO of Nissan on 1 April 2017 while remaining chairman of the company He was replaced as CEO by his then deputy Hiroto Saikawa 60 On 19 November 2018 Ghosn was fired as chairman following his arrest for the alleged under reporting of his income to Japanese financial authorities 61 After 108 days in detention Ghosn was released on bail but after 29 days he was again detained on new charges 4 April 2019 He had been due to hold a news conference but instead his lawyers released a video of Ghosn alleging this 2018 19 Nissan scandal is itself evidence of value destruction and Nissan corporate mismanagement 62 63 In September 2019 Saikawa resigned as CEO following allegations of improper payments received by him 64 Yasuhiro Yamauchi was appointed as acting CEO 65 In October 2019 the company announced it had appointed Makoto Uchida as its next CEO The appointment would be made effective by 1 January 2020 at the latest 66 On 1 December 2019 Uchida became CEO 67 In the U S Nissan has been increasing its reliance on sales to daily rental companies like Enterprise Rent A Car or Hertz In 2016 Nissan s rental sales jumped 37 and in 2017 Nissan became the only major automaker to boost rental sales when the Detroit Three cut back less profitable deliveries to daily rental companies which traditionally are the biggest customers of domestic automakers 68 In late July 2019 Nissan announced it would lay off 12 500 employees over the next 3 years citing a 95 year on year net income fall Hiroto Saikawa CEO at the time confirmed the majority of those cuts would be plant workers 69 In May 2020 Nissan announced that the company would cut production capacity by 20 due to the COVID 19 pandemic In mid 2020 the company announced it would shut down factories in Indonesia and Spain and would exit the South Korean car market 70 71 Nissan announced that the Infiniti brand will be pulled out from South Korea as well alongside the Nissan brand by December due to worsening business environment amidst the pandemic and the 2019 boycott of Japanese products in South Korea 72 Nissan announced that service centers will be managed to provide after sales services such as vehicle quality assurance and parts management for eight years 73 In November 2020 Nissan announced a 421 million loss in the last quarter due to the COVID 19 pandemic and the scandal concerning Ghosn 74 According to a spokesperson of Nissan North America the company had suffered from a strategy of volume at any cost which has been attributed by analysts to Ghosn 75 New technologies Edit Nissan s first final assembly robots were installed in the Murayama plant where the then new March Micra was assembled in 1982 In 1984 the Zama plant began to be robotized this automation process then continued throughout Nissan s factories 76 Nissan electric vehicles have been produced intermittently since 1946 In 2010 the Nissan Leaf plug in battery electric vehicle was introduced it was the world s most sold plug in electric car for nearly a decade It was preceded by the Altra and the Hypermini Until surpassed by Tesla Nissan was the world s largest electric vehicle EV manufacturer with global sales of more than 320 000 all electric vehicles as of April 2018 13 Relationships with other car companies Edit Nissan main office Ford Motor CompanyIn Australia between 1989 and 1992 Nissan Australia shared models with Ford Australia under a government backed rationalisation scheme known as the Button Plan with a version of the Nissan Pintara being sold as the Ford Corsair and a version of the Ford Falcon as the Nissan Ute 77 A variant of the Nissan Patrol was sold as the Ford Maverick during the 1988 94 model years In North America Nissan partnered with Ford from 1993 to 2002 to market the Ohio built Mercury Villager and the Nissan Quest The two minivans were virtually identical aside from cosmetic differences In 2002 Nissan and Ford announced the discontinuation of the arrangement 78 In Europe Nissan and Ford Europe partnered to produce the Nissan Terrano II and the badge engineered Ford Maverick a mid size SUV produced at the Nissan Motor Iberica S A NMISA plant in Barcelona Spain The Maverick Terrano II was a popular vehicle sold throughout Europe and Australasia It was also sold in Japan as a captive import with the Nissan model marketed as the Nissan Mistral VolkswagenNissan licensed the Volkswagen Santana Production began in 1984 at Nissan s Zama Kanagawa plant 79 80 and ended in May 1990 81 Alfa RomeoFrom 1983 to 1987 Nissan cooperated with Alfa Romeo to build the Arna 48 The goal was for Alfa to compete in the family hatchback market segment and for Nissan to establish a foothold in the European market 82 After Alfa Romeo s takeover by Fiat both the car and cooperation were discontinued General MotorsIn Europe General Motors GM and Nissan co operated on the Nissan Primastar a light commercial vehicle The high roof version is built in the NMISA plant in Barcelona Spain while the low roof version is built at Vauxhall Motors Opel s Luton plant in Bedfordshire UK In 2013 GM announced its intentions to rebadge the Nissan NV200 commercial van as the 2015 model year Chevrolet City Express to be introduced by the end of 2014 83 Holden GM s Australian subsidiary sold versions of the Nissan Pulsar as the Holden Astra between 1984 and 1989 84 LDVLDV Group sold a badge engineered light commercial vehicle version of the Nissan Serena as the LDV Cub from 1996 to 2001 The Nissan equivalent was marketed as the Nissan Vanette Cargo Alliance with Renault and Mitsubishi Edit Main article Renault Nissan Mitsubishi Alliance Former CEO Carlos Ghosn has been credited with reviving Nissan In 1999 facing severe financial difficulties Nissan entered an alliance with Renault of France 55 Signed on 27 March 1999 the Renault Nissan Alliance was the first of its kind involving a Japanese and French car manufacturer each with its own distinct corporate culture and brand identity Renault initially acquired a 36 8 stake in Nissan for 3 5 billion pending court approval and Nissan permanently vowed to buy into Renault when it was financially able In 2001 after the company s turnaround from near bankruptcy Nissan acquired a 15 share of Renault which in turn increased its stake in Nissan to 43 4 85 The Renault Nissan Alliance has evolved over the years to Renault holding 43 4 of Nissan shares while Nissan holds 15 of Renault shares The alliance itself is incorporated as the Renault Nissan B V founded on 28 March 2002 under Dutch law Renault Nissan B V is equally owned by Renault and Nissan 86 On 7 April 2010 Daimler AG exchanged a 3 1 share of its holdings for 3 1 from both Nissan and Renault This triple alliance allows for the increased sharing of technology and development costs encouraging global cooperation and mutual development 87 On 12 December 2012 the Renault Nissan Alliance formed a joint venture with Russian Technologies Alliance Rostec Auto BV with the aim of becoming the long term controlling shareholder of AvtoVAZ Russia s largest car company and owner of the country s biggest selling brand Lada 88 The takeover was completed in June 2014 and the two companies of the Renault Nissan Alliance took a combined 67 1 stake of Alliance Rostec which in turn acquired a 74 5 of AvtoVAZ thereby giving Renault and Nissan indirect control over the Russian manufacturer 89 Ghosn was appointed chairman of the board of AvtoVAZ on 27 June 2013 90 In September 2017 Nissan sold its AvtoVAZ stake to Renault for 45 million 91 Taken together in 2013 the Renault Nissan Alliance sold one in ten cars worldwide and would be the world s fourth largest automaker with sales of 8 266 098 units 92 Other alliances and joint ventures Edit A Nissan dealership in Glasgow Scotland In 2003 Nissan and Dongfeng Motor Group formed a 50 50 joint venture with the name Dongfeng Motor Co Ltd DFL The company calls itself China s first automotive joint venture enterprise with a complete series of trucks buses light commercial vehicles and passenger vehicles and the largest joint venture project of its scale 93 On 7 April 2010 Daimler AG exchanged a 3 1 share of its holdings for 3 1 from both Nissan and Renault This triple alliance allows for the increased sharing of technology and development costs encouraging global cooperation and mutual development 87 On 12 December 2012 the Renault Nissan Alliance formed a joint venture with Russian Technologies Alliance Rostec Auto BV with the aim of becoming the long term controlling shareholder of AvtoVAZ Russia s largest car company and owner of the country s biggest selling brand Lada 88 Carlos Ghosn was appointed chairman of the board of AvtoVAZ on 27 June 2013 94 Nissan exited the AvtoVAZ venture in September 2017 95 Nissan is in an alliance with Ashok Leyland in India producing light commercial vehicles 12 Together with Mitsubishi Motors Nissan develops mini cars which are produced at Mitsubishi s Mizushima plant in Kurashiki Okayama Japan under the NMKV joint venture 12 96 In May 2016 Nissan bought a controlling stake in Mitsubishi Motors for an estimated US 2 3 billion Branding and corporate identity EditBrands Edit Nissan Nissan s volume models are sold worldwide under the Nissan brand Datsun Until 1983 Nissan automobiles in most export markets were sold under the Datsun brand In 1984 the Datsun brand was phased out and the Nissan brand was phased in All cars in 1984 had both the Datsun and Nissan branding on them and in 1985 the Datsun name was completely dropped In July 2013 Nissan relaunched Datsun as a brand targeted at emerging markets However due to sluggish sales Nissan ended sales of Datsun badged vehicles in 2022 97 98 Infiniti Since 1989 Nissan has sold its luxury models under the Infiniti brand In 2012 Infiniti changed its headquarters to Hong Kong where it is incorporated as Infiniti Global Limited Its president is former BMW executive Roland Krueger From 2014 to 2020 the Japanese market Skyline rebadged Infiniti Q50 and Fuga rebadged Infiniti Q70 were sold with Infiniti emblem 99 Nismo Nissan s in house tuning shop is Nismo short for Nissan Motorsport International Limited Nismo is being re positioned as Nissan s performance brand 100 101 Current logo of Nissan since 2020 Nissan Corporation logo 2013 2020 Nissan corporate wordmark 2001 2020 Logo of Nissan 1983 2002 Logo of Nissan 2001 2020 The classic Datsun logo based on the Flag of Japan and Japan s nickname as the Land of the Rising Sun Infiniti logo since 1989 Nismo logoCorporate identity Edit Carlos Ghosn in front of new CI at the 2013 earnings press conference in Yokohama For many years Nissan used a red wordmark for the company and car badges for the Nissan and Infiniti brands 102 At Nissan s 2013 earnings press conference in Yokohama Nissan unveiled a new steel blue logo that spells out literally the distinction between Nissan the company and Nissan the brand 103 Using a blue gray color scheme the new corporate logo did read NISSAN MOTOR COMPANY Underneath were the badge logos for the Nissan Infiniti and Datsun brands Later in 2013 the Nissan Company logo changed to the Nissan Corporation logo The latter was the logo used by Nissan Motor Co Ltd 104 up to early 2020 In July 2020 Nissan introduced new corporate and brand logos as part of an image revamp tied to the Ariya launch 105 Products EditMain articles List of Nissan vehicles and List of Nissan engines At the NISMO shop in Tsurumi ku Yokohama Japan Automotive products Edit Nissan has produced an extensive range of mainstream cars and trucks initially for domestic consumption but exported around the world since the 1950s It also produced several memorable sports cars including the Datsun Fairlady 1500 1600 and 2000 Roadsters the Z car an affordable sports car originally introduced in 1969 and the GT R a powerful all wheel drive sports coupe In 1985 Nissan created a tuning division Nismo for competition and performance development of such cars One of Nismo s latest models is the 370Z Nismo Nissan also sells a range of kei cars mainly as a joint venture with other Japanese manufacturers like Suzuki or Mitsubishi Until 2013 Nissan rebadged kei cars built by other manufacturers Beginning in 2013 Nissan and Mitsubishi shared the development of the Nissan DAYZ Mitsubishi eK Wagon series 96 Nissan also has shared model development of Japanese domestic cars with other manufacturers particularly Mazda Subaru Suzuki and Isuzu In China Nissan produces cars in association with the Dongfeng Motor Group including the 2006 Nissan Livina Geniss the first in a range of a new worldwide family of medium sized cars In 2010 Nissan created another tuning division IPL this time for their premium luxury brand Infiniti In 2011 after Nissan released the Nissan NV Series in the United States Canada and Mexico Nissan created a commercial sub brand called Nissan Commercial Vehicles which focuses on commercial vans pickup trucks and fleet vehicles for the US Canadian and Mexican Markets 106 In 2013 Nissan launched the Qashqai SUV in South Africa along with their new motorsport Qashqai Car Games when It is the same year when the Datsun brand was relaunched by Nissan after a 27 year hiatus 107 Nissan launched their Nissan Intelligent Mobility vision in 2016 by revealing the IDS Concept at the 2016 Geneva Motor Show 108 Most Nissan vehicles like the Dayz Rogue and Leaf are equipped with Nissan Intelligent Mobility technology In 2018 Nissan launched the sixth generation Altima at the 2018 New York Auto Show 109 Japan Edit A Nissan dealership in Nagano Nissan Red and Blue Stage dealership Nagano 2009 As of 2007 in Japan Nissan sells its products with internationally recognized Nissan signage using a chrome circle with Nissan across the front Previously Nissan used two dealership names called Nissan Blue Stage ja 日産 ブルーステージ Nissan Buru Suteji Nissan Red Stage ja 日産 レッドステージ Nissan Reddo Suteji and Nissan Red and Blue Stage ja 日産 レッド amp ブルーステージ Nissan Reddo amp Buru Suteji established in 1999 after forming an alliance with Renault Renault also exported cars to Japan and were available at Nissan Red Stage locations and are still available at Nissan Japanese dealerships Nissan Red Stage was the result of combining an older sales channel of dealerships under the names Nissan Prince Store ja 日産 プリンス店 Nissan Purinsu ten established in 1966 after the merger of Prince Motors by Nissan which sold the Nissan Skyline Nissan Satio Store 日産 サティオ店 Nissan Satio ten sold cars developed from the Nissan Sunny at its introduction in 1966 The word satio is Latin which means ample or sufficient Nissan Cherry Store 日産 チェリー店 Nissan Cheri ten was briefly known previously as Nissan Cony Store when they assumed operations of a small kei manufacturer called Aichi Machine Industry Co Ltd 愛知機械工業 who manufactured the Cony Guppy and Giant brand of kei cars and trucks until 1970 when the network was renamed for the Nissan Cherry 110 Nissan Blue Stage was the result of combining older sales channels called Nissan Store ja 日産店 Nissan Mise in 1955 then renamed Nissan Bluebird Store in 1966 selling Nissan s original post war products called the Datsun Bluebird Datsun Sports Datsun Truck Datsun Cablight Datsun Cabstar Nissan Junior and the Nissan Patrol Nissan Motor Store 日産 モーター店 Nissan Mōta ten was originally called Nissan Cedric Store when the Nissan Cedric was introduced in 1960 then renamed Nissan Motor Store in 1965 and offered luxury sedans like the Nissan President and the former Prince Motor Company developed Nissan Laurel In 1970 Nissan also set up a separate sales chain which sold used cars including auctions called Nissan U Cars ja 日産ユーズドカーセンター Nissan Yuzudo Ka Senta which they still maintain In the early days of Nissan s dealership network Japanese consumers were directed towards specific Nissan stores for cars that were of a specific size and pricepoint Over time as sales progressed and the Japanese automotive industry became more prolific vehicles that were dedicated to particular stores were badge engineered given different names and shared within the existing networks thereby selling the same platforms at different locations The networks allowed Nissan to better compete with the network established earlier by Toyota at Japanese locations Starting in 1960 another sales distribution channel was established that sold diesel products for commercial use called Nissan Diesel until the diesel division was sold in 2007 to Volvo AB To encourage retail sales Nissan passenger vehicles that were installed with diesel engines like the Cedric were available at Nissan Diesel locations All cars sold at Nissan Blue Stage 1999 2005 Fairlady Z Serena Cedric Liberty Cefiro Laurel President Bluebird Presage Presea Terrano Leopard Avenir Nissan Truck Safari Hypermini Caravan MuranoAll cars sold at Nissan Store later Nissan Bluebird Store Nissan Exhibition Nissan Motor Store 1955 1999 Liberta Villa Bluebird C80 Caball Datsun Junior Datsun Truck Cabstar Caravan Civilian Patrol Datsun Sports Leopard Maxima Fairlady Z Gazelle Terrano Avenir Cefiro Laurel Laurel Spirit Prairie Cedric PresidentAll cars sold at Nissan Red Stage 1999 2005 X Trail Teana Cima Sylphy Crew Skyline Civilian Silvia Tino Gloria Pulsar Sunny R nessa Rasheen Bassara Primera Mistral Stagea ADvan Cube Largo Vanette Clipper Homy Elgrand Safari Wingroad Atlas Murano Renault Twingo Renault Symbol Renault Clio Renault Megane Renault KangooAll cars sold at Nissan Prince Store Nissan Satio Store Nissan Cherry Store 1966 1999 Cima Gloria Skyline Primera Auster Stanza Violet Pulsar Pulsar EXA NX Langley Volkswagen Santana Volkswagen Passat 180SX Safari Mistral Elgrand Homy Bassara Largo Serena Stagea Wingroad Expert AD van Vanette Clipper Atlas Homer cabover truck Cherry Sunny Lucino Cherry Vanette Be 1 Pao Figaro S CargoNissan has classified several vehicles as premium and select dealerships offer the Nissan Premium Factory catalog Vehicles in this category are Skyline Fuga Cima Fairlady Z Murano and the Elgrand 111 Trucks Edit Nissan Cabstar Edit Main article Nissan Cabstar Nissan Cabstar 日産 キャブスター Nissan Kyabusuta is the name used in Japan for two lines of pickup trucks and light commercial vehicles sold by Nissan and built by UD Nissan Diesel a Volvo AB company and by Renault Nissan Alliance for the European market The name originated with the 1968 Datsun Cabstar but this was gradually changed over to Nissan badging in the early 1980s The lighter range 1 1 5 tons replaced the earlier Cabstar and Homer while the heavier Caball and Clipper were replaced by the 2 4 ton range Atlas 日産 アトラス Nissan Atorasu The nameplate was first introduced in December 1981 The Cabstar is known also as the Nissan Cabstar Renault Maxity and Samsung SV110 depending on the location The range has been sold across the world It shares its platform with the Nissan Caravan Nissan Titan Edit Main article Nissan Titan 2019 Nissan Titan XD Pro 4X The Nissan Titan was introduced in 2004 as a full size pickup truck produced for the North American market the truck shares the stretched Nissan F Alpha platform with the Nissan Armada and Infiniti QX56 SUVs It was listed by Edmunds com as the best full size truck 112 113 The second generation Titan was revealed at the 2015 North American International Auto Show as a 2016 model year vehicle JapanThe first Cabstar A320 appeared in March 1968 as a replacement for the earlier Datsun Cablight It is a cab over engine truck and was available either as a truck light van glazed van or as a route van bus It uses the 1189 cc Nissan D12 engine with 56 PS 41 kW After some modifications and the new 1 3 liter J13 engine with 67 PS 49 kW in August 1970 the code became A321 The Cabstar underwent another facelift with an entirely new front clip in May 1973 The 1483 cc J15 engine became standard fitment at this time PA321 with 77 PS 57 kW at 5200 rpm The Cabstar was placed just beneath the slightly bigger Homer range in Nissan s commercial vehicle lineup It received a full makeover in January 1976 although the van models were not replaced Second generationThe F20 Nissan Homer introduced in January 1976 was also sold as the Nissan Datsun Cabstar in Japan Both ranges were sold with either a 1 5 J15 or a 2 0 liter H20 petrol inline four or with the 2 2 liter SD22 diesel engine The F20 received a desmogged engine range in September 1979 and with it a new chassis code F21 Manufacturing of the heavier range H40 series Atlas began in December 1981 while the lighter series Atlas F22 was introduced in February 1982 this succeeded both the Homer and Cabstar ranges and the nameplate has not been used in the Japanese market since EuropeThe Atlas F22 was sold in Europe as the Nissan Cabstar and proved a popular truck in the UK market due to its reliability and ability to carry weight From 1990 the range widened and was sold as the Cabstar E Actually 2015 the Cabstar is manufactured in the NSIO Nissan Spanish Industrial Operations Plant in Avila Spain under the brand name of NT400 Electric vehicles Edit Main articles Nissan electric vehicles and Nissan Leaf See also Renault Nissan Alliance zero emission vehicles 2018 Nissan Leaf at an electric charging station Nissan introduced its first battery electric vehicle the Nissan Altra at the Los Angeles International Auto Show on 29 December 1997 114 Unveiled in 2009 the EV 11 prototype electric car was based on the Nissan Tiida Versa in North America with the conventional gasoline engine replaced with an all electric drivetrain 115 In 2010 Nissan introduced the Nissan LEAF as the first mass market all electric vehicle launched globally 116 As of March 2014 update the Nissan Leaf was the world s best selling highway capable all electric car ever 117 118 Global sales totaled 100 000 Leafs by mid January 2014 representing a 45 market share of worldwide pure electric vehicles sold since 2010 117 Global Leaf sales passed the 200 000 unit milestone in December 2015 and the Leaf continued ranking as the all time best selling all electric car 119 120 Nissan s second all electric vehicle the Nissan e NV200 was announced in November 2013 121 Series production at the Nissan Plan in Barcelona Spain began on 7 May 2014 122 The e NV200 commercial van is based on the Nissan Leaf Nissan plans to launch two additional battery electric vehicles by March 2017 123 In June 2016 Nissan announced it will introduce its first range extender car in Japan before March 2017 The series plug in hybrid will use a new hybrid system dubbed e Power which debuted with the Nissan Gripz concept crossover showcased at the September 2015 Frankfurt Auto Show 124 As of August 2016 update Nissan electric vehicles were sold in 48 world markets 125 Nissan global electric vehicle sales passed 275 000 units in December 2016 13 The second generation Leaf was launched by Nissan in Japan in 2018 By December 2020 global deliveries totaled 500 000 Leaf cars 10 years after its introduction 126 Autonomous cars Edit Nissan autonomous car prototype technology was fitted on a Nissan Leaf all electric car In August 2013 Nissan announced its plans to launch several driverless cars by 2020 The company is building a dedicated autonomous driving proving ground in Japan to be completed in 2014 Nissan installed its autonomous car technology in a Nissan Leaf all electric car for demonstration purposes The car was demonstrated at Nissan 360 test drive event held in California in August 2013 127 128 In September 2013 the Leaf fitted with the prototype Advanced Driver Assistance System was granted a license plate that allows it to drive on Japanese public roads The testing car will be used by Nissan engineers to evaluate how its in house autonomous driving software performs in the real world Time spent on public roads will help refine the car s software for fully automated driving 129 The autonomous Leaf was demonstrated on public roads for the first time at a media event held in Japan in November 2013 The Leaf drove on the Sagami Expressway in Kanagawa Prefecture near Tokyo Nissan vice chairman Toshiyuki Shiga and the prefecture s governor Yuji Kuroiwa rode in the car during the test 130 131 Non automotive products Edit Nissan has also had a number of ventures outside the automotive industry most notably the Tu Ka mobile phone service est 1994 which was sold to DDI and Japan Telecom both now merged into KDDI in 1999 Nissan offers a subscription based telematics service in select vehicles to drivers in Japan called CarWings Nissan also owns Nissan Marine a joint venture with Tohatsu Corp that produces motors for smaller boats and other maritime equipment Nissan also built solid rocket motors for orbital launch vehicles such as the Lambda 4S and M V 132 133 The aerospace and defense division of Nissan was sold to IHI Corporation in 2000 134 Marketing activities EditNismo is the motorsports division of Nissan founded in 1984 Nismo cars have participated in the All Japan Sports Prototype Championship Super GT IMSA GT Championship World Sportscar Championship FIA World Endurance Championship British Touring Car Championship Supercars Championship and Blancpain GT Series Also they were featured at the World Series by Nissan from 1998 to 2004 Nissan sponsored the Los Angeles Open golf tournament from 1987 to 2007 Beginning in 2015 Nissan became the naming rights sponsor for Nissan Stadium the home of the Tennessee Titans and Tennessee State University football teams in Nashville 135 Nissan also became the official sponsor of the Heisman Trophy and UEFA Champions League 136 Since 2019 Nissan has been the naming rights sponsor for Nissan Arena the home of the Brisbane Bullets basketball team and Queensland Firebirds netball team in Brisbane Australia 137 Global sales figures EditTop 10 Nissan vehicle salesby country 2018 138 Rank Location Vehiclesales1 China 1 563 9862 United States 1 493 8773 Japan 615 9664 Mexico 314 1235 Canada 149 1176 United Kingdom 116 9147 Russia 106 1388 Brazil 97 5129 Spain 72 94310 Thailand 72 394Sales by calendar year Year Global sales2010 4 080 588 139 2011 4 669 981 140 2012 4 940 181 141 2013 5 102 979 142 2014 5 310 064 143 2015 5 421 804 144 2016 5 559 902 145 2017 5 816 278 146 2018 5 653 683 147 2019 5 176 189 148 2020 4 029 166 149 2021 4 065 014 150 Research and development EditNissan s central research 151 is inside the Oppama Plant site Yokosuka which began its operation in 1961 at the former site of Imperial Japanese Navy s Airborne Squadron base In 1982 Nissan s technical centers in Suginami Tokyo and Tsurumi Yokohama were combined into one Nissan Technical Center NTC in Atsugi Kanagawa at the foot of Mount Ōyama of the Tanzawa Mountains At its 30th anniversary in 2012 NTC employed 9 500 employees in product development design production engineering and purchasing Nissan Technical Center works closely with its overseas operations Nissan Technical Center NTC North America 152 NTC Mexico Nissan Design America and Nissan Silicon Valley Office In 2007 the company opened Nissan Advanced Technology Center NATC near the NTC site It works in close contact with the central research the Silicon Valley office the technical office near the Nissan headquarters in central Yokohama and the overseas offices in Detroit Silicon Valley and Moscow 153 Nissan s test courses are in Tochigi two courses Yokosuka and Hokkaido Nissan Digital Hubs Edit In mid 2018 Nissan launched its first of many planned software and information technology development centers in Thiruvananthapuram Kerala India 154 Manufacturing locations EditData extracted from Nissan s international corporate website 155 World locations of Nissan Motor factories as of 2013 156 East Asia Edit Japan Yokosuka Kanagawa Oppama Plant amp Research Center Kaminokawa Tochigi Tochigi Plant Kanda Fukuoka Nissan Motor Kyushu 157 amp Nissan Shatai Kyushu Plant 158 Kanagawa ku Yokohama Kanagawa Yokohama Engine Plant Nissan s oldest factory Iwaki Fukushima Iwaki Engine Plant Hiratsuka Kanagawa Nissan Shatai Shonan Plant Nagoya Aichi Aichi Machine Industry 159 Atsuta amp Eitoku Plants Matsusaka Mie Aichi Machine Industry Matsusaka Plant Tsu Mie Aichi Machine Industry Tsu Plant Uji Kyoto Auto Works Kyoto Ageo Saitama Nissan Diesel Motor currently owned by the Volvo Group Samukawa Kanagawa Nissan Machinery 160 Zama Kanagawa Assembly lines in the Zama Plant were closed in 1995 currently Global Production Engineering Center and storage unit for its historic models Automotive Energy Supply Corporation AESC a joint venture between Nissan and NEC produces lithium ion batteries in Zama Musashimurayama Tokyo Assembly lines at the Musashimurayama facility were closed in 2001 and the facility has been repurposed as the Carest Murayama Megamall It was formerly operated by the Prince Motor Company until 1966 when they merged with Nissan 161 It is now a museum called Carest Murayama Megamall occupying a 213 252 square foot facility 162 163 China mainland Wuhan Hubei Dongfeng Motor Co Ltd a joint venture Huadu District Guangzhou Guangdong Dongfeng Nissan Passenger Vehicle Company Xiangyang Hubei Dongfeng Motor Co Ltd 164 Zhengzhou Henan Zhengzhou Nissan Automobile Co Ltd a joint venture Dalian Liaoning Dongfeng Nissan Passenger Vehicle Company 165 Taiwan TaipeiSoutheast Asia Edit Malaysia Segambut Kuala Lumpur Tan Chong Motor Assemblies Sdn Bhd Serendah Selangor TCMA Vietnam Hanoi Hanoi Indonesia Cikampek West Java Philippines Santa Rosa City Laguna Thailand Bangna Samutprakarn Nissan Motors Thailand South Asia Edit India Chennai Tamil Nadu Trivandrum KeralaOceania Edit Australia Dandenong Victoria Nissan Casting Australia Pty Ltd Americas Edit United States Smyrna Tennessee Canton Mississippi Decherd Tennessee Mexico Aguascalientes Aguascalientes NISSAN AGUASCALIENTES L GONZALEZ Cuernavaca Morelos Brazil Sao Jose dos Pinhais Parana Renault Nissan plant Resende Rio de Janeiro 166 Argentina Santa Isabel Renault Nissan plant Africa Edit Morocco Tangier Under construction Renault Nissan plant Egypt 6th of October City Giza Governorate Kenya Thika Kiambu County South Africa Rosslyn Pretoria GautengEurope Edit Spain Avila Castilla y Leon United Kingdom Sunderland North East England France Flins Renault factory See also Edit Japan portal Companies portalAshok Leyland Nissan Vehicles Autech Calsonic Datsun Dongfeng Motor Company Dongfeng Nissan Diesel Company Impul Infiniti Jatco Laurence Hartnett Nissan Engine Museum Nissan Motor Car Carrier Nissan Proving Grounds Project Better Place Shinichiro Sakurai Yokohama F Marinos YulonNotes Edit US ˈ n iː s ɑː n UK ˈ n ɪ s ae n AU NZ ˈ n ɪ s e n Japanese pronunciation ɲissaɴ References Edit a b Brief History of Nissan Motor Company Brief History of Nissan Motor Company Archived from the original on 9 May 2017 Retrieved 6 April 2017 a b History of Nissan Motors National Science Museum of Japan National Museum of Nature and Science Tokyo Retrieved 6 April 2017 a b Masujiro Hashimoto Japan Automobile Hall of Fame Archived from the original on 3 September 2009 Retrieved 6 April 2017 Nissan Production Sales and Export Results for December 2016 and Calendar Year 2016 Nissan 30 January 2017 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original on 29 December 2014 Retrieved 29 December 2014 Ohnsman Alan 6 October 2011 Nissan Plans 1 4 Billion Plant in Brazil to Boost Sales Bloomberg Retrieved 10 August 2013 Bibliography EditCusumano Michael A 1985 The Japanese Automobile Industry Harvard University Press ISBN 0 674 47255 1 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Nissan Official website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Nissan amp oldid 1134205274, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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