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Toyota

Toyota Motor Corporation (Japanese: トヨタ自動車株式会社, Hepburn: Toyota Jidōsha kabushikigaisha, IPA: [toꜜjota], English: /tɔɪˈjtə/, commonly known as simply Toyota) is a Japanese multinational automotive manufacturer headquartered in Toyota City, Aichi, Japan. It was founded by Kiichiro Toyoda and incorporated on August 28, 1937 (1937-08-28). Toyota is one of the largest automobile manufacturers in the world, producing about 10 million vehicles per year.

Toyota Motor Corporation
Headquarters in Toyota, Japan
Native name
トヨタ自動車株式会社
Toyota Jidōsha kabushikigaisha
TypePublic
ISINJP3633400001
IndustryAutomotive
FoundedAugust 28, 1937; 85 years ago (1937-08-28)
FounderKiichiro Toyoda
Headquarters,
Japan
Area served
Worldwide
Key people
Production output
  • 9,472,556 (FY21)
  • 9,213,195 (2020)
ServicesBanking, financing, leasing
Revenue
  • ¥27,214,594 million
  • US$256.7 billion (FY21)
¥2,197,748 million (FY21)
¥2,282,378 million (FY21)
Total assets
  • ¥62,267,140 million
  • US$562 billion (FY21)
Total equity ¥24,288,329 million (FY21)
Number of employees
366,283 (FY21)
ParentToyota Group through cross ownership:
Divisions
Subsidiaries
Websiteglobal.toyota
Footnotes / references
Fiscal Year 2021 (FY21) is April 1, 2020, to March 31, 2021.
References:[1][2]

The company was originally founded as a spinoff of Toyota Industries, a machine maker started by Sakichi Toyoda, Kiichiro's father. Both companies are now part of the Toyota Group, one of the largest conglomerates in the world. While still a department of Toyota Industries, the company developed its first product, the Type A engine in 1934 and its first passenger car in 1936, the Toyota AA.

After World War II, Toyota benefited from Japan's alliance with the United States to learn from American automakers and other companies, which would give rise to The Toyota Way (a management philosophy) and the Toyota Production System (a lean manufacturing practice) that would transform the small company into a leader in the industry and would be the subject of many academic studies.

In the 1960s, Toyota took advantage of a rapidly growing Japanese economy to sell cars to a growing middle-class, leading to the development of the Toyota Corolla, which would go on to become the world's all-time best-selling automobile. The booming economy also funded an international expansion that would allow Toyota to grow into one of the largest automakers in the world, the largest company in Japan and the ninth-largest company in the world by revenue, as of December 2020. Toyota was the world's first automobile manufacturer to produce more than 10 million vehicles per year, a record set in 2012, when it also reported the production of its 200 millionth vehicle.

Toyota was praised for being a leader in the development and sales of more fuel-efficient hybrid electric vehicles, starting with the introduction of the Toyota Prius in 1997. The company now sells more than 40 hybrid vehicle models around the world. However, more recently, the company has also been accused of greenwashing for its skepticism of all-electric vehicles and its focus on the development of hydrogen fuel cell vehicles, like the Toyota Mirai, a technology that is costlier and has fallen far behind electric batteries. Still, in late 2022, the company signed an £11.3m government deal with the UK's Department for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy to help it develop its Hilux FC model, a new range of hydrogen-powered pickup trucks.[3]

As of 2022, the Toyota Motor Corporation produces vehicles under four brands: Daihatsu, Hino, Lexus and the namesake Toyota. The company also holds a 20% stake in Subaru Corporation, a 5.1% stake in Mazda, a 4.9% stake in Suzuki, a 4.6% stake in Isuzu, a 3.8% stake in Yamaha Motor Corporation, and a 2.8% stake in Panasonic, as well as stakes in vehicle manufacturing joint-ventures in China (FAW Toyota and GAC Toyota), the Czech Republic (TPCA), India (Toyota Kirloskar) and the United States (MTMUS).

Toyota is listed on the London Stock Exchange, Nagoya Stock Exchange, New York Stock Exchange and on the Tokyo Stock Exchange, where its stock is a component of the Nikkei 225 and TOPIX Core30 indices.

History

1920s–1930s

 
The mass-produced Toyoda automated loom, displayed at Toyota Museum in Aichi-gun, Japan

In 1924, Sakichi Toyoda invented the Toyoda Model G Automatic Loom. The principle of jidoka, which means the machine stops itself when a problem occurs, became later a part of the Toyota Production System. Looms were built on a small production line. In 1929, the patent for the automatic loom was sold to the British company Platt Brothers,[4] generating the starting capital for automobile development.[5]

Under the direction of the founder's son, Kiichiro Toyoda,[6][7] Toyoda Automatic Loom Works established an Automobile Division on September 1, 1933, and formally declared its intention to begin manufacturing automobiles on January 29, 1934.[6] A prototype Toyota Type A engine was completed on September 25, 1934, with the company's first prototype sedan, the A1, completed the following May. As Kiichiro had limited experience with automobile production, he initially focused on truck production; the company's first truck, the G1, was completed on August 25, 1935, and debuted on November 21 in Tokyo, becoming the company's first production model.[6][8] Modeled on a period Ford truck, the G1 sold for ¥2,900, ¥200 cheaper than the Ford truck. A total of 379 G1 trucks were ultimately produced.[8]

In April 1936, Toyoda's first passenger car, the Model AA, was completed. The sales price was ¥3,350, ¥400 cheaper than Ford or GM cars.[9] The company's plant at Kariya was completed in May. In July, the company filled its first export order, with four G1 trucks exported to northeastern China.[6] On September 19, 1936, the Japanese imperial government officially designated Toyota Automatic Loom Works as an automotive manufacturer.[6]

 
The 1936 Toyota AA, the first vehicle produced by the company while it was still a department of Toyota Industries

Vehicles were originally sold under the name "Toyoda" (トヨダ), from the family name of the company's founder, Kiichirō Toyoda. In September 1936, the company ran a public competition to design a new logo. Of 27,000 entries, the winning entry was the three Japanese katakana letters for "Toyoda" in a circle. However, Rizaburo Toyoda, who had married into the family and was not born with that name, preferred "Toyota" (トヨタ) because it took eight brush strokes (a lucky number) to write in Japanese, was visually simpler (leaving off the diacritic at the end), and with a voiceless consonant instead of a voiced one (voiced consonants are considered to have a "murky" or "muddy" sound compared to voiceless consonants, which are "clear").

Since toyoda literally means "fertile rice paddies", changing the name also prevented the company from being associated with old-fashioned farming. The newly formed word was trademarked and the company began trading on August 28, 1937, as the Toyota Motor Company Ltd.[6][10][11][12] Kiichiro's brother-in-law Rizaburo Toyoda was appointed the firm's first president, with Kiichiro as vice-president. Toyota Automatic Loom Works formally transferred automobile manufacturing to the new entity on September 29.[6]

The Japanese government supported the company by preventing foreign competitors Ford and General Motors from importing automobiles into Japan.[13]

1940s

Japan was heavily damaged in World War II and Toyota's plants, which were used for the war effort, were not spared. On August 14, 1945, one day before the surrender of Japan, Toyota's Koromo Plant was bombed by the Allied forces.[14] After the surrender, the U.S.-led occupying forces banned passenger car production in Japan. However, automakers like Toyota were allowed to begin building trucks for civilian use, in an effort to rebuild the nation's infrastructure.[15] The U.S. military also contracted with Toyota to repair its vehicles.[16]

By 1947, there was an emerging global Cold War between the Soviet Union and the U.S., who had been allies in World War II. U.S. priorities shifted (the "Reverse Course") from punishing and reforming Japan to ensuring internal political stability, rebuilding the economy, and, to an extent, remilitarizing Japan. Under these new policies, in 1949, Japanese automakers were allowed to resume passenger car production, but at the same time, a new economic stabilization program to control inflation plunged the automotive industry into a serious shortage of funds, while many truck owners defaulted on their loans.[17] Ultimately, the Bank of Japan, the central bank of the country, bailed out the company, with demands that the company institute reforms.[18]

1950s

As the 1950s began, Toyota emerged from its financial crisis a smaller company, closing factories and laying off workers. At about the same time, the Korean War broke out, and being located so close to the battlefront, the U.S. Army placed an order for 1,000 trucks from Toyota. The order helped to rapidly improve the struggling company's business performance.[19] In 1950, company executives, including Kiichiro's cousin Eiji Toyoda, took a trip to the United States where they trained at the Ford Motor Company and observed the operations of dozens of U.S. manufacturers.[20] The knowledge they gained during the trip, along with what the company learned making looms, would give rise to The Toyota Way (a management philosophy) and the Toyota Production System (a lean manufacturing practice) that would transform the company into a leader in the manufacturing industry.[21]

 
Toyopet Crown, the first vehicle fully designed and built by Toyota

Toyota started developing its first full-fledged passenger car, the Toyopet Crown, in January 1952. Prior to the Crown, Toyota had been outsourcing the design and manufacturing of auto bodies, which were then mounted on truck frames made by Toyota.[22] The project was a major test for Toyota, who would need to build bodies and develop a new chassis that would be comfortable, but still stand up to the muddy, slow, unpaved roads common in Japan at the time.[22] The project had been championed for many years by founder Kiichiro Toyoda, who died suddenly on March 27, 1952. The first prototypes were completed in June 1953 and began extensive testing, before the Crown went on sale in August 1955.[23] The car was met with positive reviews from around the world.

After the introduction of the Crown, Toyota began aggressively expanding into the export market. Toyota began shipping Land Cruiser knock-down kits to Latin America in November 1955,[24] sending complete Land Cruisers to Burma (now Myanmar) and the Philippines in 1956 as part of war reparations provided by the Japanese government,[25] establishing a branch in Thailand in June 1957,[26] and shipping Land Cruisers to Australia in August 1957.[25] Toyota established a production facility in Brazil in 1958, the company's first outside of Japan.[27]

Toyota entered the United States market in July 1958, attempting to sell the Toyopet Crown. The company faced problems almost immediately, the Crown was a flop in the U.S. with buyers finding it overpriced and underpowered (because it was designed for the bad roads of Japan, not high-speed performance). In response, exports of the Crown to the United States were suspended in December 1960.[28]

After Kiichiro's death, his cousin Eiji Toyoda would later become the leader of the company. Eiji helped establish the company's first plant independent from the Loom Works plant.[29] He would go on to lead the company for the next two decades.

1960s–1970s

 
Toyota 2000GT (1967–1969)

At the start of the 1960s, the Japanese economy was booming, a period that came to be known as the Japanese economic miracle. As the economy grew, so did the income of everyday people, who now could afford to purchase a vehicle. At the same time, the Japanese government heavily invested in improving road infrastructure.[30] To take advantage of the moment, Toyota and other automakers started offering affordable economy cars like the Toyota Corolla, which would go on to become the world's all-time best-selling automobile.[31][32]

Toyota also found success in the United States in 1965 with the Toyota Corona compact car, which was redesigned specifically for the American market with a more powerful engine. The Corona helped increase U.S. sales of Toyota vehicles to more than 20,000 units in 1966 (a threefold increase) and helped the company become the third-best-selling import brand in the United States by 1967. Toyota's first manufacturing investment in the United States came in 1972 when the company struck a deal with Atlas Fabricators, to produce truck beds in Long Beach, in an effort to avoid the 25% "chicken tax" on imported light trucks. By importing the truck as an incomplete chassis cab (the truck without a bed), the vehicle only faced a 4% tariff.[33] Once in the United States, Atlas would build the truck beds and attach them to the trucks. The partnership was successful and two years later, Toyota purchased Atlas.[34]

The energy crisis of the 1970s was a major turning point in the American auto industry. Before the crisis, large and heavy vehicles with powerful but inefficient engines were common. But in the years after, consumers started demanding high-quality and fuel-efficient small cars. Domestic automakers, in the midst of their malaise era, struggled to build these cars profitably, but foreign automakers like Toyota were well positioned. This, along with growing anti-Japanese sentiment, prompted the U.S. Congress to consider import restrictions to protect the domestic auto industry.

The 1960s also saw the slight opening of the Japanese auto market to foreign companies. In an effort to strengthen Japan's auto industry ahead of the market opening, Toyota purchased stakes in other Japanese automakers. That included a stake in Hino Motors, a manufacturer of large commercial trucks, buses and diesel engines, along with a 16.8 percent stake in Daihatsu, a manufacturer of kei cars, the smallest highway-legal passenger vehicles sold in Japan.[35] That would begin what would become a long-standing partnership between Toyota and the two companies. As part of the partnership, Daihatsu would supply kei cars for Toyota to sell and to a lesser extent Toyota would supply full-sized cars for Daihatsu to sell (a process known as rebadging), allowing both companies to sell a full line-up of vehicles.

1980s

 
By the 1980s, the Toyota Corolla was one of the most popular cars in the world and would go on to become the world's all-time best-selling automobile.

After the successes of the 1970s, and the threats of import restrictions, Toyota started making additional investments in the North American market in the 1980s. In 1981, Japan agreed to voluntary export restraints, which limited the number of vehicles the nation would send to the United States each year, leading Toyota to establish assembly plants in North America. The U.S. government also closed the loophole that allowed Toyota to pay lower taxes by building truck beds in America.

Also in 1981, Eiji Toyoda stepped down as president and assumed the title of chairman. He was succeeded as president by Shoichiro Toyoda, the son of the company's founder.[29] Within months, Shoichiro started to merge Toyota's sales and production organizations, and in 1982 the combined companies became the Toyota Motor Corporation. The two groups were described as "oil and water" and it took years of leadership from Shoichiro to successfully combine them into one organization.[36]

Efforts to open a Toyota assembly plant in the United States started in 1980, with the company proposing a joint-venture with the Ford Motor Company. Those talks broke down in July 1981.[37] Eventually in 1984, the company struck a deal with General Motors (GM) to establish a joint-venture vehicle manufacturing plant called NUMMI (New United Motor Manufacturing, Inc.) in Fremont, California.[38] GM saw the joint venture as a way to get access to a quality small car and an opportunity to learn about The Toyota Way and the Toyota Production System. For Toyota, the factory gave the company its first manufacturing base in North America allowing it to avoid any future tariffs on imported vehicles and saw GM as a partner who could show them how to navigate the American labor environment. The plant would be led by Tatsuro Toyoda, the younger brother of company president Shoichiro Toyoda.[39] The first Toyota assembled in America, a white Corolla, rolled off the line at NUMMI on October 7, 1986.[40]

Toyota received its first Japanese Quality Control Award at the start of the 1980s and began participating in a wide variety of motorsports. Conservative Toyota held on to rear-wheel-drive designs for longer than most; while a clear first in overall production they were only third in production of front-wheel-drive cars in 1983, behind Nissan and Honda. In part due to this, Nissan's Sunny managed to squeeze by the Corolla in numbers built that year.[41]

 
The Lexus LS 400 went on sale in May 1989 and was seen as being largely responsible for the successful launch of Lexus.

Before the decade was out, Toyota introduced Lexus, a new division that was formed to market and service luxury vehicles in international markets. Prior to the debut of Lexus, Toyota's two existing flagship models, the Crown and Century, both catered exclusively for the Japanese market and had little global appeal that could compete with international luxury brands such as Mercedes-Benz, BMW and Jaguar. The company had been developing the brand and vehicles in secret since August 1983, at a cost of over US$1 billion.[42][43] The LS 400 flagship full-size sedan debuted in 1989 to strong sales, and was largely responsible for the successful launch of the Lexus marque.

1990s

 
The Toyota Supra (JZA80) is one of the most recognized Japanese sports cars.
 
Toyota Prius, first generation (NHW10 1997–2000)

In the 1990s, Toyota began to branch out from producing mostly compact cars by adding many larger and more luxurious vehicles to its lineup, including a full-sized pickup, the T100 (and later the Tundra), several lines of SUVs, a sport version of the Camry, known as the Camry Solara. They would also launch newer iterations of their sports cars, namely the MR2, Celica, and Supra during this era.

December 1997 saw the introduction of the first-generation Toyota Prius, the first mass-produced gasoline-electric hybrid car.[44] The vehicle would be produced exclusively for the Japanese market for the first two years.

With a major presence in Europe, due to the success of Toyota Team Europe in racing, the corporation decided to set up Toyota Motor Europe Marketing and Engineering, TMME, to help market vehicles in the continent. Two years later, Toyota set up a base in the United Kingdom, TMUK, as the company's cars had become very popular among British drivers. Bases in Indiana, Virginia, and Tianjin were also set up.

Toyota also increased its ownership of Daihatsu during this period. In 1995, Toyota increased its shareholding in the company to 33.4 percent, giving Toyota the ability to veto shareholder resolutions at the annual meeting.[35] In 1998, Toyota increased its holding in the company to 51.2 percent, becoming the majority shareholder.[45]

On September 29, 1999, the company decided to list itself on the New York and London Stock Exchanges.

The later half of the 1990s would also see the Toyoda brothers step back from the company their father had founded. In 1992, Shoichiro Toyoda would shift to become chairman, allowing his brother Tatsuro to become president, a job he held until his retirement in 1995.[39] Shoichiro would step down as chairman in 1999. Both would retain honorary advisory roles in the company. Hiroshi Okuda would lead the company as president from 1995 until 1999 when he became chairman and the President's office would be filled by Fujio Cho.

2000s

In August 2000, exports began of the Prius.[44] In 2001, Toyota acquired its long time partner, truck and bus manufacturer Hino Motors. In 2002, Toyota entered Formula One competition and established a manufacturing joint venture in France with French automakers Citroën and Peugeot. A youth-oriented marque for North America, Scion, was introduced in 2003. Toyota ranked eighth on Forbes 2000 list of the world's leading companies for the year 2005.[46] Also in 2005, Fujio Cho would shift to become chairman of Toyota and would be replaced as president by Katsuaki Watanabe.

In 2007, Toyota released an update of its full-sized truck, the Tundra, produced in two American factories, one in Texas and one in Indiana. Motor Trend named the Tundra "Truck of the Year", and the 2007 Toyota Camry "Car of the Year" for 2007. It also began the construction of two new factories, one in Woodstock, Ontario, Canada, and the other in Blue Springs, Mississippi, USA.

The company was number one in global automobile sales for the first quarter of 2008.[47]

Toyota was hit by the global financial crisis of 2008 as it was forced in December 2008 to forecast its first annual loss in 70 years.[48] In January 2009, it announced the closure of all of its Japanese plants for 11 days to reduce output and stocks of unsold vehicles.[49]

In October 2009, Toyota announced that they were establishing an office in South Korea and launched the Camry sedan, Camry hybrid, Prius and the RAV4 during the launching event at the Grand Hyatt Seoul.[50]

Between 2009 and 2011, Toyota conducted recalls of millions of vehicles after reports that several drivers experienced unintended acceleration. The recalls were to prevent a front driver's side floor mat from sliding into the foot pedal well, causing the pedals to become trapped and to correct the possible mechanical sticking of the accelerator pedal.[51] At least 37 were killed in crashes allegedly related to unintended acceleration,[52] approximately 9 million cars and trucks were recalled,[53] Toyota was sued for personal injuries and wrongful deaths,[54] paid US$1 billion to settle a class action lawsuit to compensate owners for lost resale value,[55] and paid a US$1.2 billion criminal penalty to the United States government over accusations that it had intentionally hid information about safety defects and had made deceptive statements to protect its brand image.[56]

 
Akio Toyoda was named President of Toyota in 2009, pictured in 2011.

Amid the unintended acceleration scandal, Katsuaki Watanabe stepped down as company president. He was replaced by Akio Toyoda, grandson of company founder Kiichiro Toyoda, on June 23, 2009. Akio had been with Toyota since 1984, working jobs in production, marketing and product development, and took a seat on the board of directors in 2000.[57] Akio's promotion by the board marked the return of a member of the Toyoda family to the top leadership role for the first time since 1999.[58]

2010s

In 2011, Toyota, along with large parts of the Japanese automotive industry, suffered from a series of natural disasters. The 2011 Tōhoku earthquake and tsunami led to a severe disruption of the supplier base and a drop in production and exports.[59][60] Severe flooding during the 2011 monsoon season in Thailand affected Japanese automakers that had chosen Thailand as a production base. Toyota is estimated to have lost production of 150,000 units to the tsunami and production of 240,000 units to the floods.

On February 10, 2014, it was announced that Toyota would cease manufacturing vehicles and engines in Australia by the end of 2017.[61][62] The decision was based on the unfavourable Australian dollar making exports not viable, the high cost of local manufacture, and the high amount of competition in a relatively small local market.[62] The company planned to consolidate its corporate functions in Melbourne by the end of 2017, and retain its Altona plant for other functions. The workforce is expected to be reduced from 3,900 to 1,300.[63] Both Ford Motor Company and General Motors (Holden) followed suit, ending Australian production in 2016 and 2017 respectively.

The automaker narrowly topped global sales for the first half of 2014, selling 5.1 million vehicles in the six months ending June 30, 2014, an increase of 3.8% on the same period the previous year. Volkswagen AG, which recorded sales of 5.07 million vehicles, was close behind.[64]

In August 2014, Toyota announced it would be cutting its spare-parts prices in China by up to 35%. The company admitted the move was in response to a probe foreshadowed earlier in the month by China's National Development and Reform Commission of Toyota's Lexus spare-parts policies, as part of an industry-wide investigation into what the Chinese regulator considers exorbitantly high prices being charged by automakers for spare parts and after-sales servicing.[65]

In November 2015, the company announced that it would invest US$1 billion over the next 5 years into artificial intelligence and robotics research.[66] In 2016, Toyota invested in Uber.[67] In 2020, a corporate governance report showed that Toyota owns 10.25 million shares of Uber, which was valued at $292.46 million as of March 30, 2020. According to Reuters, this was roughly 0.6 per cent of Uber's outstanding shares.[68]

In March 2016, Toyota partnered with Yanmar to create a fiberglass pleasure boat using Yanmar outboard marine diesel engines or Toyota inboard engines.[69]

In August 2016, the company purchased all remaining assets of Daihatsu, making the manufacturer of small cars a wholly owned subsidiary of Toyota.[70]

On August 27, 2018, Toyota announced an investment of US$500 million in Uber's autonomous cars.[71]

2020s

By 2020, Toyota reclaimed its position as the largest automaker in the world, surpassing Volkswagen.[72] It sold 9.528 million vehicles globally despite an 11.3% drop in sales due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[72] This includes subsidiaries Daihatsu and Hino Motors.[72][73]

On April 2, 2020, BYD and Toyota announced a new joint venture between the two companies called BYD Toyota EV Technology Co., Ltd., with the aim of "developing BEVs (Battery Electric Vehicles) that appeal to customers."[74]

In March 2021, Toyota, its subsidiary Hino, and Isuzu announced the creation of a strategic partnership between the three companies. Toyota acquired a 4.6% stake in Isuzu while the latter plans to acquire Toyota shares for an equivalent value. The three companies said they would form a new joint venture by April called Commercial Japan Partnership Technologies Corporation with the aim of developing fuel cell and electric light trucks. Toyota would own an 80% stake in the venture while Hino and Isuzu would own 10% each.[75]

In April 2021, Toyota said that it will buy Lyft's self-driving technology unit for $550 million and merge it with its newly created Woven Planet Holdings automation division.[76]

In June 2021, the company defended its donations to United States Republican lawmakers after they voted against certifying the results of the 2020 presidential election, saying it did not believe it was "appropriate to judge members of Congress" for that one vote.[77] A report by Axios found that Toyota was the top donor to 2020 election objectors, by a substantial margin.[78] The company then reversed course in July 2021 and ceased donations to election objectors, releasing a statement saying it understood that its PAC's donations to those objectors, which far outpaced those of any other company, "troubled some stakeholders."[79]

In December 2021, Toyota announced that it would invest ¥8,000,000,000,000 ($70 billion at 2021 exchange rate) in electric vehicles by 2030, launch 30 EV models worldwide by that year, and set a sales target of 3.5 million electric vehicles in 2030.[80]

Toyota will increase its software engineer intake to around 40% to 50% of all technical hires from the second quarter of 2022, the move plans to address a transformation to so-called CASE — connected, autonomous, shared and electric — technologies in an environment of intensifying global competition.[81]

In 2021, Toyota told some of its suppliers to increase their semiconductor inventory levels from the conventional three months to five months in response to the COVID-19 chip shortage.[82] The "just-in-time" supply chain in which parts are only delivered when necessary, had already been revised after the March 11, 2011, earthquake and tsunami in Japan, lifting inventories across the entire procurement network.[82] The time it takes Toyota to turn over its inventory increased by around 40% during the past ten years, to 36.36 days as of March 2021.[82]

In August 2022, Toyota pledged up to $5.6 billion towards production of electric vehicle battery production and announced an increase in investment in its plant near Greensboro, North Carolina.[83][84]

In January 2023, Toyota CEO and President Akio Toyoda announced that he was stepping down and passing the position on to Koji Sato. Akio is the great-grandson of company founder Rizaburo Toyoda. Sato had previously run Lexus, Toyota's luxury car brand. The change is set to take effect on April 1, 2023.[85] [86]

Senior leadership

List of former chairmen

In 1950, Toyota was split into Toyota Motor Co. and Toyota Motor Sales Co. (sales arm of Toyota); the two companies merged in 1982 to create one unified company, with then-Toyota Motor Co. President Eiji Toyoda becoming Chairman. Chairmen listed prior to 1982 below were for the pre-merger Toyota Motor Co. only.[87][88]

  1. Rizaburo Toyoda (1937–1948)
  2. Taizo Ishida (1948–1952)
  3. Shoichi Saito (1952–1959)
  4. Masaya Hanai (1959–1982)
  5. Eiji Toyoda (1982–1994)
  6. Shoichiro Toyoda (1994–1999)
  7. Hiroshi Okuda (1999[89]–2006)
  8. Fujio Cho (2006[90]–2013)

List of former presidents

Similar to the chairman position, in 1982 the then-Toyota Motor Sales Co. President Shoichiro Toyoda becoming President. President's listed prior to 1982 below were for the pre-merger Toyota Motor Co. only.[87][91]

  1. Rizaburo Toyoda (1937–1941)
  2. Kiichiro Toyoda (1941–1950)
  3. Taizo Ishida (1950–1961)
  4. Fukio Nakagawa (1961–1967)
  5. Eiji Toyoda (1967–1982)
  6. Shoichiro Toyoda (1982[92]–1992)
  7. Tatsuro Toyoda (1992–1995)[93]
  8. Hiroshi Okuda (1995[94]–1999)
  9. Fujio Cho (1999–2005)[90]
  10. Katsuaki Watanabe (2005–2009)[95]

Product line

Best-selling Toyota and Lexus
nameplates globally, FY2021[96]
Rank
in Toyota
Model Sales
(thousands of units)
1 Toyota Corolla 1,312
2 Toyota RAV4 980
3 Toyota Yaris 743
4 Toyota Camry 685
5 Toyota Hilux 605
6 Toyota Highlander 466
7 Toyota Tacoma 268
8 Toyota C-HR 235
9 Toyota Levin 221
10 Lexus RX 199

As of 2009, Toyota officially lists approximately 70 different models sold under its namesake brand, including sedans, coupes, vans, trucks, hybrids, and crossovers.[97] Many of these models are produced as passenger sedans, which range from the subcompact Toyota Yaris, compact Corolla, to mid-size Camry and full-size Avalon.[97] Minivans include the Innova, Alphard/Vellfire, Sienna, and others.[97] Several small cars, such as the xB and tC, were sold under the Scion brand.[97]

SUVs and crossovers

 
Toyota C-HR
 
Toyota RAV4

Toyota SUV and crossover line-up grew quickly in the late 2010s to 2020s due to the market shift to SUVs. Toyota crossovers range from the subcompact Yaris Cross and C-HR, compact Corolla Cross and RAV4, to midsize Harrier/Venza and Kluger/Highlander.[97] Other crossovers include the Raize, Urban Cruiser.[98] Toyota SUVs range from the midsize Fortuner to full-size Land Cruiser.[97] Other SUVs include the Rush, Prado, FJ Cruiser, 4Runner, and Sequoia.[97]

Pickup trucks

 
Toyota Hilux (global)
 
Toyota Tacoma (US/Canada)

Toyota first entered the pickup truck market in 1947 with the SB that was only sold in Japan and limited Asian markets. It was followed in 1954 by the RK (renamed in 1959 as the Stout) and in 1968 by the compact Hilux. With continued refinement, the Hilux (simply known as the Pickup in some markets) became famous for being extremely durable and reliable.[99] Extended cab and crew cab versions were eventually added, and Toyota continues to produce them today under various names depending on the market in various cab lengths, with gasoline or diesel engines, and 2WD and 4WD versions.

In North America, the Hilux became a major model for the company, leading the company to launch the Tacoma in 1995.[100] The Tacoma was based on the Hilux, but with a design intended to better suit the needs of North American consumers who often use pickup trucks as personal vehicles. The design was a success and the Tacoma became the best-selling compact pickup in North America.

After the success of its compact Hilux pickups in North America, Toyota decided to enter the full-size pickup market, which was traditionally dominated by domestic automakers. The company introduced the T100 for the 1993 US model year. The T100 had a full-size 8-foot (2.4 m) long bed, but suspension and engine characteristics were similar to that of a compact pickup. Sales were disappointing and the T100 was criticized for having a small V6 engine (especially compared to the V8 engines common in American full-size trucks), lacking an extended-cab version, being too small, and too expensive (because of the 25% tariff on imported trucks).[101] In 1995, Toyota added the more powerful V6 engine from the new Tacoma to the T100 and also added an extended cab version.[101] In 1999, Toyota replaced the T100 with the larger Tundra, which would be built in the US with a V8 engine and styling that more closely matched other American full-size trucks.[102]

Luxury vehicles

 
Toyota Crown RS (fifteenth generation, S220; 2018)

In the Japanese home market, Toyota has two flagship models: the Crown premium sedan and the Century limousine.

In the 1980s, Toyota wanted to expand its luxury car offerings but realized that existing Japanese-market flagship models had little global appeal and could not compete with established brands such as Mercedes-Benz, BMW and Jaguar or the Acura and Infiniti marquees being launched by Japanese competitors.

Before the decade was out, Toyota introduced Lexus, a new division that was formed to market and service luxury vehicles in markets outside of Japan. The company developed the brand and its vehicles in secret since August 1983, at a cost of over US$1 billion.[42][43] The Lexus LS flagship full-size sedan debuted in 1989 to strong sales, and was largely responsible for the successful launch of the Lexus marque. Subsequently, the division added sedan, coupé, convertible and SUV models.

The Lexus brand was introduced to the Japanese market in 2005, previously all vehicles marketed internationally as Lexus from 1989 to 2005 were released in Japan under the Toyota marque.

Buses

The Toyota Coaster is a minibus introduced in 1969 that seats 17 passengers. The Coaster is widely used in Japan, Singapore, Hong Kong, and Australia, but also in the developing world for minibus operators in Africa, the Middle East, South Asia, the Caribbean, and South America to operate as public transportation.

Technology

Hybrid electric vehicles

 
The Toyota Prius, flagship of Toyota's hybrid technology, is the world's best-selling hybrid car.

Toyota is the world's leader in sales of hybrid electric vehicles, one of the largest companies to encourage the mass-market adoption of hybrid vehicles across the globe, and the first to commercially mass-produce and sell such vehicles, with the introduction of the Toyota Prius in 1997.[103][104] The company's series hybrid technology is called Hybrid Synergy Drive, and it was later applied to many vehicles in Toyota's product lineup, starting first with the Camry and the technology was also brought to the luxury Lexus division.

As of January 2020, Toyota Motor Corporation sells 44 Toyota and Lexus hybrid passenger car models in over 90 countries and regions around the world, and the carmaker has sold over 15 million hybrid vehicles since 1997.[105] The Prius family is the world's top-selling hybrid gasoline-electric vehicle nameplate with almost 4 million units sold worldwide as of January 2017.[105]

Besides the Prius, Toyota's current hybrid lineup includes the Alphard/Vellfire/Crown Vellfire, Avalon, Aqua, Camry, C-HR/IZOA, Corolla/Levin, Corolla Cross/Frontlander, Crown, Harrier/Venza, Highlander/Kluger/Crown Kluger, Innova, Noah/Voxy, Raize, RAV4/Wildlander, Sequoia, Sienna, Sienta, Tundra, Urban Cruiser Hyryder, Yaris and Yaris Cross. The Lexus current hybrid lineup consists of the ES, IS, LC, LM, LS, NX, RC, RX, and UX.

Plug-in hybrids

 
Second-generation Toyota Prius Plug-in Hybrid

The Prius Plug-In Hybrid Concept was exhibited in late 2009, and shortly after, a global demonstration program involving 600 pre-production test cars began. The vehicles were leased to fleet and government customers, and were equipped with data tracking devices to allow Toyota to monitor the car's performance. The vehicle was based on the third-generation Toyota Prius and outfitted with two additional lithium-ion batteries beyond the normal hybrid battery pack.[106] The additional batteries were used to operate the car with minimal use of the internal combustion engine until they are depleted, at which point they are disengaged from the system. They are not used in tandem with the main hybrid battery pack.

After the conclusion of the demonstration program, the production version of the Prius Plug-in Hybrid was unveiled in September 2011. The production Prius Plug-in had a maximum electric-only speed of 100 km/h (62 mph), and the United States Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) rated the vehicle as having an range of 18 kilometres (11 mi) in blended mode (mostly electric, but supplemented by the internal combustion engine).[107] Toyota ultimately only did a small production run with 75,400 vehicles being produced between 2012 and 2016.[108]

The second-generation Prius Plug-in (renamed the Prius Prime in the US) was unveiled in early 2016.[109] Unlike the prior generation, where the plug-in battery was limited by being added to the existing Prius, this model would be developed in tandem with the fourth-generation Prius, allowing Toyota to increase the range to 40 kilometres (25 mi), with a top speed of 135 km/h (84 mph), without needing the assistance of the internal combustion engine.[110] The second-generation Prius Plug-in went on sale starting in late 2016, with Toyota expecting to sell up to 60,000 units globally per year.[111]

A second plug-in hybrid model, the Toyota RAV4 PHV (RAV4 Prime in the US) was unveiled in December 2019. The vehicle has an EPA-estimated 68 kilometres (42 mi) of all-electric range and generates a combined 225 kilowatts (302 hp), enabling it to be Toyota's second fastest car currently in production (behind the GR Supra 3.0 sports car).[112] Sales started in mid-2020.

Battery electric vehicles

Toyota has been criticized for being slow to add battery electric vehicles to its lineup. It was publicly skeptical about battery-electric technology, and has lobbied against government mandates to transition to zero tailpipe emission vehicles.[113]

Toyota's first all-electric vehicle was made in response to one of those government mandates. The company created the first generation Toyota RAV4 EV after the California Air Resources Board mandated in the late 1990s that every automaker offer a zero-emissions vehicle.[114][115] A total of 1,484 were leased and/or sold in California from 1997 to 2003, when the state dropped its mandate under legal pressure from lawsuits filed by automakers. At the lessees' request, many units were sold after the vehicle was discontinued.[116]

A second generation of the RAV4 EV was developed in 2010 as part of a deal with Tesla. The production version was unveiled in August 2012, using battery pack, electronics and powertrain components from the Tesla Model S.[117] The RAV4 EV had a limited production run which resulted in just under 3,000 vehicles being produced, before it was discontinued in 2014.[118][119] According to Bloomberg News, the partnership between Tesla and Toyota was "marred by clashes between engineers".[120]

Starting in 2009, Toyota introduced three generations of concept electric vehicles called the FT-EV built on a modified Toyota iQ platform. In late-2012, the company announced plans build a production version of the car called the Toyota iQ EV (Scion iQ EV in the US, Toyota eQ in Japan),[121] but ultimately production was cut back to 100 cars for special fleet use in Japan and the U.S. only.[122]

In late 2012, Toyota announced that it would back away from fully electric vehicles, after producing less than 5,000. At the time, the company's vice chairman, Takeshi Uchiyamada, said: "The current capabilities of electric vehicles do not meet society's needs, whether it may be the distance the cars can run, or the costs, or how it takes a long time to charge." Toyota's emphasis would be re-focused on the hybrids and hydrogen fuel cell vehicles.[122][25] These early electric vehicles are widely considered as compliance cars, meaning that it is developed to meet California's zero-emissions standards for automakers.[123]

 
Akio Toyoda shows prototypes of 15 BEVs during Toyota's briefing on BEV strategies in December 2021.

A shift in Toyota's formerly battery-agnostic posture could be seen as early as 2016, when Toyota's CFO Takahiko Ijichi “sent a strong signal that Toyota soon plans to jump on the battery bandwagon and make electric cars despite expressing skeptical views about their range and charging times,” as the Wall Street Journal wrote.[124] Toyota said it would make and sell battery-electric vehicles if and where regulations and markets demand.

A year later, Toyota outlined its electric-vehicle plans for between 2020 and 2030 to the press in Tokyo, saying it would introduce "more than 10" battery-electric vehicles worldwide by the early 2020s, beginning in China, and later in Japan, Europe, the US and India.[125]

In April 2019, Toyota introduced the C-HR EV, its first mass-produced pure electric model in China along with an identical twin called the IZOA EV.[126] It went on sale in April 2020 and May 2020 respectively. Nikkei reported in October 2020 that Toyota had only sold less than 2,000 units in the first eight months of the year.[127]

Toyota introduced the C+pod in late 2020, a 2-seater kei car with an estimated range of 100 kilometres (62 mi) and a top speed of 60 kilometres per hour (37 mph).[128][129]

In April 2021, Toyota revealed the bZ4X, an electric crossover SUV that will be the first vehicle built on a dedicated electric platform called e-TNGA when it goes on sale in mid-2022.[130] It is the first model of the bZ ("beyond Zero") series of battery electric vehicles.[131] The company has also stated that there will be seven "bZ" models to be launched globally out of 15 BEV models by 2025.[132]

In December 2021, Toyota announced in Tokyo plans for 30 battery-electric models by 2030, to sell 3.5 million BEVs per year by that date, and that its premium-brand Lexus will be 100% battery-operated by 2030 in North America, Europe, and China. The company announced investments of $70 billion into the company's electrification.[133]

Toyota has been developing solid-state batteries in partnership with Panasonic, in which the company has more than a thousand patents covering solid-state batteries by late 2020.[134] The technology has been implemented on the Toyota LQ concept. Toyota hopes the technology could increase efficiency of battery electric vehicles by 30 percent, which in turn would reduce battery costs by the same amount.[134]

Hydrogen fuel-cell

 
The Toyota Mirai fuel-cell vehicle
 
The Toyota SORA fuel-cell bus

In 2002, Toyota began a development and demonstration program to test the Toyota FCHV, a hybrid hydrogen fuel cell vehicle based on the Toyota Highlander production SUV. Toyota also built a FCHV bus based on the Hino Blue Ribbon City low-floor bus.[135][136] Toyota has built several prototypes/concepts of the FCHV since 1997, including the Toyota FCHV-1, FCHV-2, FCHV-3, FCHV-4, and Toyota FCHV-adv. The Toyota FCV-R fuel cell concept car was unveiled at the 2011 Tokyo Motor Show. The FCV-R sedan seats four and has a fuel cell stack including a 70 MPa high-pressure hydrogen tank, which can deliver a range of 435 mi (700 km) under the Japanese JC08 test cycle. Toyota said the car was planned for launch in about 2015.[137]

In August 2012, Toyota announced its plans to start retail sales of a hydrogen fuel-cell sedan in California in 2015. Toyota expects to become a leader in this technology.[138] The prototype of its first hydrogen fuel cell vehicle will be exhibited at the November 2013 Tokyo Motor Show, and in the United States at the January 2014 Consumer Electronics Show.[139]

Toyota's first hydrogen fuel-cell vehicles to be sold commercially, the Toyota Mirai (Japanese for "future"), was unveiled at the November 2014 Los Angeles Auto Show.[140] In January 2015, it was announced that production of the Mirai fuel cell vehicle would increase from 700 units in 2015 to approximately 2,000 in 2016 and 3,000 in 2017.[141] Sales in Japan began on December 15, 2014, at a price of ¥6,700,000 (~US$57,400). The Japanese government plans to support the commercialization of fuel-cell vehicles with a subsidy of ¥2,000,000 (~US$19,600).[142] Retail sales in the U.S. began in August 2015 at a price of US$57,500 before any government incentives. Initially, the Mirai will only be available in California.[143][144] The market release in Europe is slated for September 2015, and initially will be available only in the UK, Germany, and Denmark, followed by other countries in 2017. Pricing in Germany starts at €60,000 (~US$75,140) plus VAT (€78,540).[145]

In 2015, Toyota released 5,600 patents for free use until 2020, hoping to promote global development of hydrogen fuel-cell technology.[146][147][148][149]

Autonomous vehicles

 
Toyota e-Palette

Toyota is regarded as being behind in smart car technology and in need of innovation.[150] Although the company Toyota unveiled its first self-driving test vehicle in 2017, and has been developing its own self-driving technology named "Chauffeur" (intended for full self-driving) and "Guardian" (a driver assist system), neither of these has been introduced into any production vehicles.[151]

The company had set up a large research and development operation by 2018, spending almost US$4 billion to start an autonomous vehicle research institute in California's Silicon Valley[150] and another ¥300 billion on a similar research institute in Tokyo that would partner with fellow Toyota Group companies and automotive suppliers Aisin Seiki and Denso.[152][153]

Toyota has also been collaborating with autonomous vehicle technology developers and, in some cases, purchasing the companies. Toyota has acquired the autonomous vehicle division of ride-hailing service Lyft for $550 million,[154] invested a total of US$1 billion in competing ride-hailing service Uber's self-driving vehicle division,[155][156] invested $400 million in autonomous vehicle technology company Pony.ai,[157] and announced a partnership with Chinese electronics e-commerce company Cogobuy to build a "Smart Car Ecosystem."[158]

In December 2020, Toyota showcased the 20-passenger "e-Palette" shared autonomous vehicle, which was used at the 2021 Tokyo Olympic Games.[159][160] Toyota has announced it intends to have the vehicle available for commercial applications before 2025.[161]

Since February 2021, Toyota has been building the sensor-laden "Woven City" which it calls a "175-acre high tech, sensor-laden metropolis" at the foot of Mount Fuji. When completed in 2024 the Woven City will be used to run tests on autonomous vehicles for deliveries, transport and mobile shops with the city's residents participating in the living laboratory experiment.[162][163]

Motorsports

 
The Toyota TS050 Hybrid that won the 2018 24 Hours of Le Mans, preserved with dirt from the race

Toyota has been involved in many global motorsports series, providing vehicles, engines and other auto parts under both the Toyota and Lexus brands.

Toyota Gazoo Racing (GR) is Toyota's performance brand that is used in many of the world's major motorsports contests. Toyota Gazoo Racing Europe, based in Cologne, Germany, competes in the FIA World Endurance Championship, while the Finland-based Toyota Gazoo Racing WRT participates in the World Rally Championship. Toyota Gazoo Racing South Africa competes in the Dakar Rally. Between 2002 and 2009, the Toyota Racing team competed in Formula One. Toyota won the 24 Hours of Le Mans in 2018, 2019 and 2020 with a Toyota TS050 Hybrid, and in 2021 with a Toyota GR010 Hybrid.

Toyota Racing Development USA (TRD USA) is responsible for participation in major motorsports contests in the United States including NASCAR, NHRA, Indy Racing League and Formula Drift.

Toyota also makes engines and other auto parts for other Japanese motorsports including Super Formula, Super GT, Formula 3, and Toyota Racing Series.

Non-automotive activities

Aerospace

Toyota is a minority shareholder in Mitsubishi Aircraft Corporation, having invested US$67.2 million in the new venture which will produce the Mitsubishi Regional Jet, slated for first deliveries in 2017.[164] Toyota has also studied participation in the general aviation market and contracted with Scaled Composites to produce a proof of concept aircraft, the TAA-1, in 2002.[165][166]

Pleasure boats

In 1997, building on a previous partnership with Yamaha Marine, Toyota created "Toyota Marine",[167] building private ownership motorboats, currently sold only in Japan. A small network in Japan sells the luxury craft at 54 locations, called the "Toyota Ponam" series, and in 2017, a boat was labeled under the Lexus brand name starting May 26, 2017.[168]

Philanthropy

 
The Toyota Municipal Museum of Art in Aichi, sponsored by the manufacturer

Toyota supports a variety of philanthropic work in areas such as education, conservation, safety, and disaster relief.

Some of the organizations that Toyota has worked with in the US include the American Red Cross, the Boys and Girls Club, Leaders in Environmental Action for the Future (LEAF), and the National Center for Family Literacy.[169]

The Toyota USA Foundation exists to support education in the areas of science, technology, engineering, and mathematics.[170]

In addition, Toyota works with nonprofits to improve their processes and operations such as the Food Bank For New York City.[171][172]

Toyota also supports a variety of work in Japan.[173]

The Toyota Foundation takes a global perspective providing grants in the three areas of human and natural environments, social welfare, and education and culture.[174]

Higher education

Toyota established the Toyota Technological Institute in 1981, as Sakichi Toyoda had planned to establish a university as soon as he and Toyota became successful. Toyota Technological Institute founded the Toyota Technological Institute at Chicago in 2003. Toyota is supporter of the Toyota Driving Expectations Program, Toyota Youth for Understanding Summer Exchange Scholarship Program, Toyota International Teacher Program, Toyota TAPESTRY, Toyota Community Scholars (scholarship for high school students), United States Hispanic Chamber of Commerce Internship Program, and Toyota Funded Scholarship.[175] It has contributed to a number of local education and scholarship programs for the University of Kentucky, Indiana, and others.[175]

Robotics

 
Toyota trumpet-playing robot

In 2004, Toyota showcased its trumpet-playing robot.[176] Toyota has been developing multitask robots destined for elderly care, manufacturing, and entertainment. A specific example of Toyota's involvement in robotics for the elderly is the Brain Machine Interface. Designed for use with wheelchairs, it "allows a person to control an electric wheelchair accurately, almost in real-time", with his or her mind.[177] The thought controls allow the wheelchair to go left, right, and forward with a delay between thought and movement of just 125 milliseconds.[177] Toyota also played a part in the development of Kirobo, a 'robotic astronaut'.

In 2017, the company introduced T-HR3, a humanoid robot with the ability to be remotely controlled. The robot can copy the motions of a connected person. The 2017 version used wires for the connection but the 2018 version used 5G from a distance up to 10 km.[178][179]

Agricultural biotechnology

Toyota invests in several small start-up businesses and partnerships in biotechnology, including:

Sewing machine brand

Aisin, another member of the Toyota Group of companies, uses the same Toyota wordmark logo to market its home-use sewing machines. Aisin was founded by Kiichiro Toyoda after he founded the Toyota Motor Corporation. According to Aisin, he was so pleased with the first sewing machine, he decided to apply the same Toyota branding as his auto business, despite the companies being independent from each other.[180]

Carbon removal

Toyota Ventures, along with JetBlue Technology Ventures and Parley for the Oceans, is among the corporate investors that have invested $40 million in the Air Company, a carbon negative vodka distiller and perfume and hand sanitizer manufacturer that uses heterogeneous catalysis to convert captured carbon into ethanol.[181]

Controversies

Corrosion lawsuit

In November 2016, Toyota agreed to pay $3.4 billion to settle allegations that roughly one-and-a-half million of its Tacoma, Tundra, and Sequoia pickup trucks and SUVs had been outfitted with frames prone to corrosion and perforation. According to court papers, the corrosion could reach levels high enough to compromise the vehicle's structural integrity.[182]

Death from overwork

On February 9, 2002, Kenichi Uchino, aged 30 years, a quality control manager, collapsed then died at work.[183][184] On January 2, 2006, an unnamed chief engineer of the Camry Hybrid, aged 45 years, died from heart failure in his bed.[183]

Fines for environmental breaches

In 2003, Toyota was fined $34M for violating the United States Clean Air Act.[185]

In January 2021, Toyota was fined $180M for violating U.S. emissions regulations from 2005 to 2015.[186][187][188] At the time, this was the biggest civil penalty ever levied for violating United States Environmental Protection Agency emission reporting requirements.[186][187]

2009–2011 unintended acceleration recalls

Between 2009 and 2011 Toyota, under pressure from the U.S. National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA), conducted recalls of millions of vehicles after reports that several drivers experienced unintended acceleration. The first recall, in November 2009, was to prevent a front driver's side floor mat from sliding into the foot pedal well, causing the pedals to become trapped. The second recall, in January 2010, was begun after some crashes were shown not to have been caused by floor mats and may be caused by possible mechanical sticking of the accelerator pedal.[51] Worldwide, approximately 9 million cars and trucks were impacted by the recalls.[53]

NHTSA received reports of a total of 37 deaths allegedly related to unintended acceleration, although an exact number was never verified.[52] As a result of the problems, Toyota faced nearly 100 lawsuits from the families of those killed, drivers who were injured, vehicle owners who lost resale value, and investors who saw a drop in the value of their shares. While most of the personal injury and wrongful death lawsuits were settled confidentially,[54] Toyota did spend more than US$1 billion to settle a class action lawsuit to compensate owners for lost resale value,[55] and the company agreed to pay a US$1.2 billion criminal penalty to the United States government over accusations that it had intentionally hid information about safety defects from the public and had made deceptive statements to protect its brand image. The penalty was the largest ever levied against a car company.[56]

Takata airbag recalls

Toyota was impacted by a recall of faulty airbag inflators made by Takata. The inflators can explode, shooting metal fragments into the vehicle cabin. Millions of vehicles produced between 2000 and 2014 were impacted by the recall, with some needing multiple repairs.[189][190]

June 2010 Chinese labour strike

On June 21, 2010, a Chinese labor strike happened in Tianjin Toyoda Gosei Co, Tianjin. Toyoda Gosei Co supplies parts to Tianjin FAW Toyota Motor Co.[191]

Opposition to California's fuel efficiency standards

In October 2019, Toyota backed the Trump Administration's proposal that federal authority should override California's ability to set its own emissions standards for automobiles. The proposal would reduce California's 2025 fuel efficiency standard from about 54.5 to 37 MPG.[192] This shift by Toyota away from fuel efficiency damaged the company's reputation as a green brand.[193][186]

Greenwashing controversies

Toyota has repeatedly been the subject of greenwashing controversies, owing to their criticism of electric cars, while promoting hydrogen and hybrid vehicles – with the manner in which they have advertised and marketed hybrid vehicles causing particular consternation.[194][195][196]

Toyota President, Akio Toyoda, has made repeated statements about electric cars, claiming that they are "overhyped" and that "the more EVs we build, the worse carbon dioxide gets."[197] This stance has led Transport & Environment to rank Toyota as the least ready OEM to transition to battery electric vehicles by 2030, stating: "Toyota has not set a target for 2030 and it plans to produce just 10% BEVs in 2025. It is expected to rely on polluting hybrid technologies."[198]

Alongside their commitment to hybrid vehicles, Toyota has repeatedly stated its commitment to producing hydrogen cars, claiming that they will be the future of the company.[199][200][201] Many journalists and environmental activists have accused Toyota of greenwashing due to their stance on hydrogen vehicles in the face of clear evidence that they are considerably less efficient than battery electric cars, and will create more greenhouse gas emissions due to energy-intensity of the hydrogen extraction process.[202][203][204][205]

Self-charging hybrids

In 2019, Toyota launched a global campaign for its self-proclaimed ‘self-charging hybrid’ vehicles, which use fossil fuel to charge the on-board batteries in their cars, rather than using an external electricity source, as with plug-in hybrids.

The language around ‘self-charging’ hybrids caused much consumer criticism that this was misleading, as the vehicles did not self-charge, but instead required users to input fossil fuels, and these vehicles could not run on electric power alone – as was made clear during the COVID-19 pandemic, when Toyota contacted the owners of these vehicles to inform them of the need to regularly refuel the vehicles with fossil fuels.[206][207]

Complaints about self-charging hybrid advertising were recorded in multiple countries,[208] and in 2020 the Norwegian Consumer Authority banned the adverts outright in Norway for misleading consumers,[209] stating: “It is misleading to give the impression that the power to the hybrid battery is free of charge, since the electricity produced by the car has consumption of gasoline as a necessary condition.”.[210]

Later in 2020, a study by Transport & Environment[211][212] concluded that real-world CO2 emissions from hybrid vehicles were, on average, over two and a half times those of official test values.[213][214] Another report found that even the most efficient hybrid vehicles produce at least 40-70% of the emissions of a petrol or diesel car, and will have created 15% more emissions in its manufacturer than a battery electric vehicle would have.[215][216][217]

As the world's biggest producer and marketer of hybrid vehicles, Toyota has attracted the greatest attention in the wake of these reports, given that the Japanese manufacturer plans to increase hybrid production at a time when most major manufacturers are switching to solely producing electric vehicles by 2035 due to the contribution of cars to the climate crisis.[218][219]

This was compounded in early 2021, when Toyota was fined a record $180 million for failing to comply with the Clean Air Act’s emissions reporting requirements from 2005 to 2015.[220][221][222]

Misleading marketing

Toyota has also drawn negative attention for its marketing campaigns, which use studies funded by the manufacturer to substantiate claims about the efficiency of their vehicles. An exposé by IrishEVs found that Toyota Ireland had paid University College Dublin to conduct a study of just seven cars over seven days to make claims about the efficiency of their hybrid vehicles.[223][224]

Furthermore, Toyota Ireland had consistently used funded polls to substantiate claims about their CO2 emissions, and their perception as a “leading brand tackling climate change in Ireland.” No data or evidence was offered to validate these claims.[225]

Wheels falling off

In June 2022, Toyota recalled 2,700 of its first mass-produced all-electric vehicles due to worries that their wheels could fall off during driving. It was discovered that the bolts on the bZ4X's wheels could loosen up to the point where the wheel simply detaches from the car, causing a loss of control over the vehicle and possible accident.[226]

Corporate affairs

 
Principal headquarters building of Toyota

Toyota is headquartered in the city of Toyota,[227] which was named Koromo until 1951, when it changed its name to match the automaker. Toyota City is located in the Aichi Prefecture of Japan. The main headquarters of Toyota is located in a four-story building that has been described as "modest".[228] In 2013, company CEO Akio Toyoda reported that it had difficulties retaining foreign employees at the headquarters due to the lack of amenities in the city.[229]

Surrounding the headquarters are the 14-story Toyota Technical Center and the Honsha plant (which was established in 1938). Toyota and its Toyota Group affiliates operate a total of 17 manufacturing facilities in Aichi Prefecture and a total of 32 plants in Japan.

Toyota also operates offices in Bunkyo, Tokyo, and Nakamura-ku, Nagoya.[227]

Worldwide presence

Top 10 Toyota and Lexus vehicle sales
by country, 2021[230]
Rank
in Toyota
Location Vehicle
sales
1   United States 2,332,262
2   China 1,944,010
3   Japan 1,476,136
4   GCC 331,786
5   Indonesia 291,499
6   Thailand 239,723
7   Australia 232,932
8   Canada 225,215
9   Brazil 173,475
10   Taiwan 146,009

Outside of Japan, as one of the world's largest automotive manufacturer by production volume, Toyota has factories in most parts of the world. The company assembles vehicles in Argentina, Belgium, Brazil, Canada, Colombia, the Czech Republic, France, Indonesia, Mexico, the Philippines, Poland, Russia, South Africa, Thailand, Turkey, the United Kingdom, the United States, and Venezuela.

Additionally, the company also has joint venture, licensed, or contract factories in China, France, India, Malaysia, Pakistan, Taiwan, the United States, and Vietnam.

North America

 
The Toyota Camry is assembled in several facilities around the world including Australia, China, Taiwan, Japan, Malaysia, the Philippines, Russia, Thailand, India, Vietnam, and the United States.

Toyota Motor North America is headquartered in Plano, Texas, and operates as a holding company for all operations of the Toyota Motor Corporation in Canada, Mexico, and the United States. Toyota's operations in North America began on October 31, 1957, and the current company was established in 2017 from the consolidation of three companies: Toyota Motor North America, Inc., which controlled Toyota's corporate functions; Toyota Motor Sales, U.S.A., Inc. which handled marketing, sales, and distribution in the United States; and Toyota Motor Engineering & Manufacturing North America which oversaw operations at all assembly plants in the region. While all three companies continue to exist in legal name, they operate as one company out of one headquarters campus.

Toyota has a large presence in the United States with six major assembly plants in Huntsville, Alabama, Georgetown, Kentucky, Princeton, Indiana, San Antonio, Texas, Buffalo, West Virginia, and Blue Springs, Mississippi. In 2018, Toyota and Mazda announced a joint venture plant that will produce vehicles in Huntsville, Alabama, starting in 2021.[231]

It has started producing larger trucks, such as the new Tundra, to go after the full-size pickup market in the United States. Toyota is also pushing hybrid electric vehicle in the US such as the Prius, Camry Hybrid, Highlander Hybrid, and various Lexus products. Currently, Toyota has no plans to offer diesel motor options in its North American products, including pickup trucks.[232]

Toyota Canada Inc., which is part of Toyota Motor North America, handles marketing, sales, and distribution in Canada. Toyota Motor Manufacturing Canada operates three assembly plants: two in Cambridge, Ontario and one in Woodstock, Ontario.[233] In 2006, Toyota's subsidiary Hino Motors opened a heavy duty truck plant, also in Woodstock, employing 45 people and producing 2,000 trucks annually.[234]

Europe/Western Asia

Top 10 Toyota and Lexus vehicle production
by country, 2021[230]
Rank
in Toyota
Location Vehicle
production
1   Japan 2,877,962
2   China 1,649,653
3   United States 1,144,722
4   Thailand 513,836
5   Canada 427,056
6   Turkey 228,557
7   Mexico 222,342
8   France 205,714
9   Indonesia 186,085
10   Brazil 171,283


Toyota Motor Europe is headquartered in Brussels, Belgium, and oversees all operations of the Toyota Motor Corporation in Europe and western Asia. Toyota's operations in Europe began in 1963. Toyota has a significant presence in Europe with nine production facilities in Kolín, Czech Republic, Burnaston, England, Deeside, England, Onnaing, France, Jelcz-Laskowice, Poland, Wałbrzych, Poland, Ovar, Portugal, Saint Petersburg, Russia, and Arifiye, Turkey.[235] Toyota also operates a joint venture plant with Citroën and Peugeot in Valenciennes, France.

Australia

In 1963, Australia was one of the first countries to assemble Toyotas outside Japan. However, in February 2014, Toyota was the last of Australia's major automakers to announce the end of production in Australia. The closure of Toyota's Australian plant was completed on October 3, 2017, and had produced a total 3,451,155 vehicles. At its peak in October 2007, Toyota manufactured 15,000 cars a month.[236] Before Toyota, Ford and GM's Holden had announced similar moves, all citing an unfavorable currency and attendant high manufacturing costs.[237]

Financials

Toyota is publicly traded on the Tokyo, Osaka, Nagoya, Fukuoka, and Sapporo exchanges under company code TYO: 7203. In Japan, Toyota's stock is a component of the Nikkei 225 and TOPIX Core30 indices.

In addition, Toyota is foreign-listed on the New York Stock Exchange under NYSE: TM and on the London Stock Exchange under LSE: TYT.

Toyota has been publicly traded in Japan since 1949 and internationally since 1999.[238]

Company strategy

 
New Toyota factory in Ohira, near Sendai, Miyagi Prefecture, Japan: A month after this picture was taken, the region was devastated by the March 11 earthquake and tsunami. The plant was only lightly damaged, but remained closed more than a month, mainly due to lack of supplies and energy, in addition to a badly damaged Sendai port.

The Toyota Way

The Toyota Way is a set of principles and behaviors that underlie the company's approach to management and production (which is further defined as the Toyota Production System).

The company has been developing its corporate philosophy since 1948 and passing it on as implicit knowledge to new employees, but as the company expanded globally, leaders officially identified and defined the Toyota Way in 2001. Toyota summarized it under two main pillars: continuous improvement and respect for people. Under the continuous improvement pillar are three principles: challenge (form a long-term vision), kaizen (a continual improvement process), and genchi genbutsu ("go and see" the process to make correct decisions). Under the respect for people pillar are two principles: respect and teamwork.[239]

In 2004, Dr. Jeffrey Liker, a University of Michigan professor of industrial engineering, published The Toyota Way. In his book, Liker calls the Toyota Way "a system designed to provide the tools for people to continually improve their work."[240] According to Liker, there are 14 principles of The Toyota Way that can be organized into four themes: (1) long-term philosophy, (2) the right process will produce the right results, (3) add value to the organization by developing your people, and (4) continuously solving root problems drives organizational learning. The 14 principles are further defined in the Wikipedia article on The Toyota Way.

Toyota Production System

The Toyota Way also helped shape the company's approach to production, where it was an early pioneer of what would be come to be known as lean manufacturing.[241] The company defines the Toyota Production System under two main pillars: just-in-time[242] (make only what is needed, only when it is needed, and only in the amount that is needed) and Jidoka[243] (automation with a human touch).

The origin of the Toyota Production System is in dispute, with three stories of its origin: (1) that during a 1950 trip to train with the Ford Motor Company, company executives also studied the just-in-time distribution system of the grocery store company Piggly-Wiggly,[244] (2) that they followed the writings of W. Edwards Deming,[245] and (3) they learned the principles from a WWII US government training program (Training Within Industry).[246]

After developing the Toyota Production System in its own facilities, the company began teaching the system to its parts suppliers in the 1990s. Other companies were interested in the instruction, and Toyota later started offering training sessions. The company also has donated the training to non-profit groups to increase their efficiency and thus ability to serve people.

Logo and branding

 
Employee at the Toyota Automobile Museum explains development of Toyota name and brand.

In 1936, Toyota entered the passenger car market with its Model AA and held a competition to establish a new logo emphasizing speed for its new product line. After receiving 27,000 entries, one was selected that additionally resulted in a change of its moniker to "Toyota" from the family name "Toyoda", which means rice paddy. The new name was believed to sound better, and its eight-stroke count in the Japanese language was associated with wealth and good fortune. The original logo was a heavily stylized version of the katakana characters for Toyota (トヨタ).[247]

As the company started to expand internationally in the late 1950s, the katakana character logo was supplemented by various wordmarks with the English form of the company name in all capital letters, "TOYOTA."[247]

Toyota introduced a worldwide logo in October 1989 to commemorate the 50th year of the company, and to differentiate it from the newly released luxury Lexus brand.[248] The logo consists of three ovals that combine to form the letter "T", which stands for Toyota. Toyota says that the overlapping of the two perpendicular ovals inside the larger oval represents the mutually beneficial relationship and trust between the customer and the company while the larger oval surrounding both of these inner ovals represents the "global expansion of Toyota's technology and unlimited potential for the future".[249][250] The new logo started appearing on all printed material, advertisements, dealer signage, and most vehicles in 1990.

In countries or regions using traditional Chinese characters, e.g. Hong Kong and Taiwan, Toyota is known as "豐田".[251] In countries using simplified Chinese characters (e.g. China and Singapore), Toyota is written as "丰田"[252] (pronounced as Fēngtián in Mandarin Chinese and Hɔng Tshan in Minnanese). These are the same characters as the founding family's name "Toyoda" in Japanese.

 
Some new vehicles, like this Tacoma, still use the heritage TOYOTA wordmark.

Toyota still uses the katakana character logo as its corporate emblem in Japan, including on the headquarters building,[253] and some special edition vehicles still use the "TOYOTA" wordmark on the grille as a nod to the company's heritage.[254]

On July 15, 2015, the company was delegated its own generic top-level domain, .toyota.[255]

Sports sponsorships

Toyota sponsors several teams and has purchased naming rights for several venues, and even competitions, including:

As of 2017, Toyota is an official sponsor of Cricket Australia,[256] the England and Wales Cricket Board[257] and the AFL.[258] In March 2015, Toyota became a sponsor partner for the Olympic Games, in the form of supplying vehicles and communications between vehicles until 2024.[259]

See also

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External links

  • Official website  
  • Business data for Toyota Motor Corp:
    • SEC filings

toyota, this, article, about, japanese, manufacturer, other, uses, disambiguation, motor, corporation, japanese, トヨタ自動車株式会社, hepburn, jidōsha, kabushikigaisha, toꜜjota, english, ɔɪ, commonly, known, simply, japanese, multinational, automotive, manufacturer, he. This article is about the Japanese car manufacturer For other uses see Toyota disambiguation Toyota Motor Corporation Japanese トヨタ自動車株式会社 Hepburn Toyota Jidōsha kabushikigaisha IPA toꜜjota English t ɔɪ ˈ j oʊ t e commonly known as simply Toyota is a Japanese multinational automotive manufacturer headquartered in Toyota City Aichi Japan It was founded by Kiichiro Toyoda and incorporated on August 28 1937 1937 08 28 Toyota is one of the largest automobile manufacturers in the world producing about 10 million vehicles per year Toyota Motor CorporationHeadquarters in Toyota JapanNative nameトヨタ自動車株式会社Romanized nameToyota Jidōsha kabushikigaishaTypePublicTraded asTYO 7203NAG 7203NYSE TMLSE TYTNikkei 225 component TYO TOPIX Core30 component TYO ISINJP3633400001IndustryAutomotiveFoundedAugust 28 1937 85 years ago 1937 08 28 FounderKiichiro ToyodaHeadquartersToyota City Aichi JapanArea servedWorldwideKey peopleTakeshi Uchiyamada chairman Shigeru Hayakawa Vice chairman Akio Toyoda president Production output9 472 556 FY21 9 213 195 2020 ServicesBanking financing leasingRevenue 27 214 594 millionUS 256 7 billion FY21 Operating income 2 197 748 million FY21 Net income 2 282 378 million FY21 Total assets 62 267 140 millionUS 562 billion FY21 Total equity 24 288 329 million FY21 Number of employees366 283 FY21 ParentToyota Group through cross ownership Toyota Industries cross owns 8 28 Subaru Corporation cross owns 3 17 Denso cross owns 3 12 Mazda cross owns 0 25 Suzuki cross owns 0 2 DivisionsLexusScion defunct SubsidiariesDaihatsuDenso 25 FAW Toyota China 50 GAC Toyota China 50 Hino MotorsSubaru Corporation 20 Toyota ArgentinaToyota Auto BodyToyota Financial ServicesToyota Kirloskar MotorsToyota Motor Corporation AustraliaToyota Motor EuropeToyota Motor East JapanToyota Motor KyushuToyota Motor Manufacturing Indonesia 95 Toyota Motor North AmericaToyota Motor PakistanToyota Motor PhilippinesToyota Motor Thailand 86 Toyota South Africa MotorsWebsiteglobal wbr toyotaFootnotes referencesFiscal Year 2021 FY21 is April 1 2020 to March 31 2021 References 1 2 The company was originally founded as a spinoff of Toyota Industries a machine maker started by Sakichi Toyoda Kiichiro s father Both companies are now part of the Toyota Group one of the largest conglomerates in the world While still a department of Toyota Industries the company developed its first product the Type A engine in 1934 and its first passenger car in 1936 the Toyota AA After World War II Toyota benefited from Japan s alliance with the United States to learn from American automakers and other companies which would give rise to The Toyota Way a management philosophy and the Toyota Production System a lean manufacturing practice that would transform the small company into a leader in the industry and would be the subject of many academic studies In the 1960s Toyota took advantage of a rapidly growing Japanese economy to sell cars to a growing middle class leading to the development of the Toyota Corolla which would go on to become the world s all time best selling automobile The booming economy also funded an international expansion that would allow Toyota to grow into one of the largest automakers in the world the largest company in Japan and the ninth largest company in the world by revenue as of December 2020 update Toyota was the world s first automobile manufacturer to produce more than 10 million vehicles per year a record set in 2012 when it also reported the production of its 200 millionth vehicle Toyota was praised for being a leader in the development and sales of more fuel efficient hybrid electric vehicles starting with the introduction of the Toyota Prius in 1997 The company now sells more than 40 hybrid vehicle models around the world However more recently the company has also been accused of greenwashing for its skepticism of all electric vehicles and its focus on the development of hydrogen fuel cell vehicles like the Toyota Mirai a technology that is costlier and has fallen far behind electric batteries Still in late 2022 the company signed an 11 3m government deal with the UK s Department for Business Energy and Industrial Strategy to help it develop its Hilux FC model a new range of hydrogen powered pickup trucks 3 As of 2022 update the Toyota Motor Corporation produces vehicles under four brands Daihatsu Hino Lexus and the namesake Toyota The company also holds a 20 stake in Subaru Corporation a 5 1 stake in Mazda a 4 9 stake in Suzuki a 4 6 stake in Isuzu a 3 8 stake in Yamaha Motor Corporation and a 2 8 stake in Panasonic as well as stakes in vehicle manufacturing joint ventures in China FAW Toyota and GAC Toyota the Czech Republic TPCA India Toyota Kirloskar and the United States MTMUS Toyota is listed on the London Stock Exchange Nagoya Stock Exchange New York Stock Exchange and on the Tokyo Stock Exchange where its stock is a component of the Nikkei 225 and TOPIX Core30 indices Contents 1 History 1 1 1920s 1930s 1 2 1940s 1 3 1950s 1 4 1960s 1970s 1 5 1980s 1 6 1990s 1 7 2000s 1 8 2010s 1 9 2020s 2 Senior leadership 2 1 List of former chairmen 2 2 List of former presidents 3 Product line 3 1 SUVs and crossovers 3 2 Pickup trucks 3 3 Luxury vehicles 3 4 Buses 4 Technology 4 1 Hybrid electric vehicles 4 2 Plug in hybrids 4 3 Battery electric vehicles 4 4 Hydrogen fuel cell 4 5 Autonomous vehicles 5 Motorsports 6 Non automotive activities 6 1 Aerospace 6 2 Pleasure boats 6 3 Philanthropy 6 4 Higher education 6 5 Robotics 6 6 Agricultural biotechnology 6 7 Sewing machine brand 6 8 Carbon removal 7 Controversies 7 1 Corrosion lawsuit 7 2 Death from overwork 7 3 Fines for environmental breaches 7 4 2009 2011 unintended acceleration recalls 7 5 Takata airbag recalls 7 6 June 2010 Chinese labour strike 7 7 Opposition to California s fuel efficiency standards 7 8 Greenwashing controversies 7 8 1 Self charging hybrids 7 8 2 Misleading marketing 7 9 Wheels falling off 8 Corporate affairs 8 1 Worldwide presence 8 1 1 North America 8 1 2 Europe Western Asia 8 1 3 Australia 8 2 Financials 9 Company strategy 9 1 The Toyota Way 9 2 Toyota Production System 9 3 Logo and branding 9 4 Sports sponsorships 10 See also 11 References 12 External linksHistory EditMain article History of Toyota 1920s 1930s Edit The mass produced Toyoda automated loom displayed at Toyota Museum in Aichi gun Japan In 1924 Sakichi Toyoda invented the Toyoda Model G Automatic Loom The principle of jidoka which means the machine stops itself when a problem occurs became later a part of the Toyota Production System Looms were built on a small production line In 1929 the patent for the automatic loom was sold to the British company Platt Brothers 4 generating the starting capital for automobile development 5 Under the direction of the founder s son Kiichiro Toyoda 6 7 Toyoda Automatic Loom Works established an Automobile Division on September 1 1933 and formally declared its intention to begin manufacturing automobiles on January 29 1934 6 A prototype Toyota Type A engine was completed on September 25 1934 with the company s first prototype sedan the A1 completed the following May As Kiichiro had limited experience with automobile production he initially focused on truck production the company s first truck the G1 was completed on August 25 1935 and debuted on November 21 in Tokyo becoming the company s first production model 6 8 Modeled on a period Ford truck the G1 sold for 2 900 200 cheaper than the Ford truck A total of 379 G1 trucks were ultimately produced 8 In April 1936 Toyoda s first passenger car the Model AA was completed The sales price was 3 350 400 cheaper than Ford or GM cars 9 The company s plant at Kariya was completed in May In July the company filled its first export order with four G1 trucks exported to northeastern China 6 On September 19 1936 the Japanese imperial government officially designated Toyota Automatic Loom Works as an automotive manufacturer 6 The 1936 Toyota AA the first vehicle produced by the company while it was still a department of Toyota Industries Vehicles were originally sold under the name Toyoda トヨダ from the family name of the company s founder Kiichirō Toyoda In September 1936 the company ran a public competition to design a new logo Of 27 000 entries the winning entry was the three Japanese katakana letters for Toyoda in a circle However Rizaburo Toyoda who had married into the family and was not born with that name preferred Toyota トヨタ because it took eight brush strokes a lucky number to write in Japanese was visually simpler leaving off the diacritic at the end and with a voiceless consonant instead of a voiced one voiced consonants are considered to have a murky or muddy sound compared to voiceless consonants which are clear Since toyoda literally means fertile rice paddies changing the name also prevented the company from being associated with old fashioned farming The newly formed word was trademarked and the company began trading on August 28 1937 as the Toyota Motor Company Ltd 6 10 11 12 Kiichiro s brother in law Rizaburo Toyoda was appointed the firm s first president with Kiichiro as vice president Toyota Automatic Loom Works formally transferred automobile manufacturing to the new entity on September 29 6 The Japanese government supported the company by preventing foreign competitors Ford and General Motors from importing automobiles into Japan 13 1940s Edit Japan was heavily damaged in World War II and Toyota s plants which were used for the war effort were not spared On August 14 1945 one day before the surrender of Japan Toyota s Koromo Plant was bombed by the Allied forces 14 After the surrender the U S led occupying forces banned passenger car production in Japan However automakers like Toyota were allowed to begin building trucks for civilian use in an effort to rebuild the nation s infrastructure 15 The U S military also contracted with Toyota to repair its vehicles 16 By 1947 there was an emerging global Cold War between the Soviet Union and the U S who had been allies in World War II U S priorities shifted the Reverse Course from punishing and reforming Japan to ensuring internal political stability rebuilding the economy and to an extent remilitarizing Japan Under these new policies in 1949 Japanese automakers were allowed to resume passenger car production but at the same time a new economic stabilization program to control inflation plunged the automotive industry into a serious shortage of funds while many truck owners defaulted on their loans 17 Ultimately the Bank of Japan the central bank of the country bailed out the company with demands that the company institute reforms 18 1950s Edit As the 1950s began Toyota emerged from its financial crisis a smaller company closing factories and laying off workers At about the same time the Korean War broke out and being located so close to the battlefront the U S Army placed an order for 1 000 trucks from Toyota The order helped to rapidly improve the struggling company s business performance 19 In 1950 company executives including Kiichiro s cousin Eiji Toyoda took a trip to the United States where they trained at the Ford Motor Company and observed the operations of dozens of U S manufacturers 20 The knowledge they gained during the trip along with what the company learned making looms would give rise to The Toyota Way a management philosophy and the Toyota Production System a lean manufacturing practice that would transform the company into a leader in the manufacturing industry 21 Toyopet Crown the first vehicle fully designed and built by Toyota Toyota started developing its first full fledged passenger car the Toyopet Crown in January 1952 Prior to the Crown Toyota had been outsourcing the design and manufacturing of auto bodies which were then mounted on truck frames made by Toyota 22 The project was a major test for Toyota who would need to build bodies and develop a new chassis that would be comfortable but still stand up to the muddy slow unpaved roads common in Japan at the time 22 The project had been championed for many years by founder Kiichiro Toyoda who died suddenly on March 27 1952 The first prototypes were completed in June 1953 and began extensive testing before the Crown went on sale in August 1955 23 The car was met with positive reviews from around the world After the introduction of the Crown Toyota began aggressively expanding into the export market Toyota began shipping Land Cruiser knock down kits to Latin America in November 1955 24 sending complete Land Cruisers to Burma now Myanmar and the Philippines in 1956 as part of war reparations provided by the Japanese government 25 establishing a branch in Thailand in June 1957 26 and shipping Land Cruisers to Australia in August 1957 25 Toyota established a production facility in Brazil in 1958 the company s first outside of Japan 27 Toyota entered the United States market in July 1958 attempting to sell the Toyopet Crown The company faced problems almost immediately the Crown was a flop in the U S with buyers finding it overpriced and underpowered because it was designed for the bad roads of Japan not high speed performance In response exports of the Crown to the United States were suspended in December 1960 28 After Kiichiro s death his cousin Eiji Toyoda would later become the leader of the company Eiji helped establish the company s first plant independent from the Loom Works plant 29 He would go on to lead the company for the next two decades 1960s 1970s Edit Toyota 2000GT 1967 1969 At the start of the 1960s the Japanese economy was booming a period that came to be known as the Japanese economic miracle As the economy grew so did the income of everyday people who now could afford to purchase a vehicle At the same time the Japanese government heavily invested in improving road infrastructure 30 To take advantage of the moment Toyota and other automakers started offering affordable economy cars like the Toyota Corolla which would go on to become the world s all time best selling automobile 31 32 Toyota also found success in the United States in 1965 with the Toyota Corona compact car which was redesigned specifically for the American market with a more powerful engine The Corona helped increase U S sales of Toyota vehicles to more than 20 000 units in 1966 a threefold increase and helped the company become the third best selling import brand in the United States by 1967 Toyota s first manufacturing investment in the United States came in 1972 when the company struck a deal with Atlas Fabricators to produce truck beds in Long Beach in an effort to avoid the 25 chicken tax on imported light trucks By importing the truck as an incomplete chassis cab the truck without a bed the vehicle only faced a 4 tariff 33 Once in the United States Atlas would build the truck beds and attach them to the trucks The partnership was successful and two years later Toyota purchased Atlas 34 The energy crisis of the 1970s was a major turning point in the American auto industry Before the crisis large and heavy vehicles with powerful but inefficient engines were common But in the years after consumers started demanding high quality and fuel efficient small cars Domestic automakers in the midst of their malaise era struggled to build these cars profitably but foreign automakers like Toyota were well positioned This along with growing anti Japanese sentiment prompted the U S Congress to consider import restrictions to protect the domestic auto industry The 1960s also saw the slight opening of the Japanese auto market to foreign companies In an effort to strengthen Japan s auto industry ahead of the market opening Toyota purchased stakes in other Japanese automakers That included a stake in Hino Motors a manufacturer of large commercial trucks buses and diesel engines along with a 16 8 percent stake in Daihatsu a manufacturer of kei cars the smallest highway legal passenger vehicles sold in Japan 35 That would begin what would become a long standing partnership between Toyota and the two companies As part of the partnership Daihatsu would supply kei cars for Toyota to sell and to a lesser extent Toyota would supply full sized cars for Daihatsu to sell a process known as rebadging allowing both companies to sell a full line up of vehicles 1980s Edit By the 1980s the Toyota Corolla was one of the most popular cars in the world and would go on to become the world s all time best selling automobile After the successes of the 1970s and the threats of import restrictions Toyota started making additional investments in the North American market in the 1980s In 1981 Japan agreed to voluntary export restraints which limited the number of vehicles the nation would send to the United States each year leading Toyota to establish assembly plants in North America The U S government also closed the loophole that allowed Toyota to pay lower taxes by building truck beds in America Also in 1981 Eiji Toyoda stepped down as president and assumed the title of chairman He was succeeded as president by Shoichiro Toyoda the son of the company s founder 29 Within months Shoichiro started to merge Toyota s sales and production organizations and in 1982 the combined companies became the Toyota Motor Corporation The two groups were described as oil and water and it took years of leadership from Shoichiro to successfully combine them into one organization 36 Efforts to open a Toyota assembly plant in the United States started in 1980 with the company proposing a joint venture with the Ford Motor Company Those talks broke down in July 1981 37 Eventually in 1984 the company struck a deal with General Motors GM to establish a joint venture vehicle manufacturing plant called NUMMI New United Motor Manufacturing Inc in Fremont California 38 GM saw the joint venture as a way to get access to a quality small car and an opportunity to learn about The Toyota Way and the Toyota Production System For Toyota the factory gave the company its first manufacturing base in North America allowing it to avoid any future tariffs on imported vehicles and saw GM as a partner who could show them how to navigate the American labor environment The plant would be led by Tatsuro Toyoda the younger brother of company president Shoichiro Toyoda 39 The first Toyota assembled in America a white Corolla rolled off the line at NUMMI on October 7 1986 40 Toyota received its first Japanese Quality Control Award at the start of the 1980s and began participating in a wide variety of motorsports Conservative Toyota held on to rear wheel drive designs for longer than most while a clear first in overall production they were only third in production of front wheel drive cars in 1983 behind Nissan and Honda In part due to this Nissan s Sunny managed to squeeze by the Corolla in numbers built that year 41 The Lexus LS 400 went on sale in May 1989 and was seen as being largely responsible for the successful launch of Lexus Before the decade was out Toyota introduced Lexus a new division that was formed to market and service luxury vehicles in international markets Prior to the debut of Lexus Toyota s two existing flagship models the Crown and Century both catered exclusively for the Japanese market and had little global appeal that could compete with international luxury brands such as Mercedes Benz BMW and Jaguar The company had been developing the brand and vehicles in secret since August 1983 at a cost of over US 1 billion 42 43 The LS 400 flagship full size sedan debuted in 1989 to strong sales and was largely responsible for the successful launch of the Lexus marque 1990s Edit The Toyota Supra JZA80 is one of the most recognized Japanese sports cars Toyota Prius first generation NHW10 1997 2000 In the 1990s Toyota began to branch out from producing mostly compact cars by adding many larger and more luxurious vehicles to its lineup including a full sized pickup the T100 and later the Tundra several lines of SUVs a sport version of the Camry known as the Camry Solara They would also launch newer iterations of their sports cars namely the MR2 Celica and Supra during this era December 1997 saw the introduction of the first generation Toyota Prius the first mass produced gasoline electric hybrid car 44 The vehicle would be produced exclusively for the Japanese market for the first two years With a major presence in Europe due to the success of Toyota Team Europe in racing the corporation decided to set up Toyota Motor Europe Marketing and Engineering TMME to help market vehicles in the continent Two years later Toyota set up a base in the United Kingdom TMUK as the company s cars had become very popular among British drivers Bases in Indiana Virginia and Tianjin were also set up Toyota also increased its ownership of Daihatsu during this period In 1995 Toyota increased its shareholding in the company to 33 4 percent giving Toyota the ability to veto shareholder resolutions at the annual meeting 35 In 1998 Toyota increased its holding in the company to 51 2 percent becoming the majority shareholder 45 On September 29 1999 the company decided to list itself on the New York and London Stock Exchanges The later half of the 1990s would also see the Toyoda brothers step back from the company their father had founded In 1992 Shoichiro Toyoda would shift to become chairman allowing his brother Tatsuro to become president a job he held until his retirement in 1995 39 Shoichiro would step down as chairman in 1999 Both would retain honorary advisory roles in the company Hiroshi Okuda would lead the company as president from 1995 until 1999 when he became chairman and the President s office would be filled by Fujio Cho 2000s Edit In August 2000 exports began of the Prius 44 In 2001 Toyota acquired its long time partner truck and bus manufacturer Hino Motors In 2002 Toyota entered Formula One competition and established a manufacturing joint venture in France with French automakers Citroen and Peugeot A youth oriented marque for North America Scion was introduced in 2003 Toyota ranked eighth on Forbes 2000 list of the world s leading companies for the year 2005 46 Also in 2005 Fujio Cho would shift to become chairman of Toyota and would be replaced as president by Katsuaki Watanabe In 2007 Toyota released an update of its full sized truck the Tundra produced in two American factories one in Texas and one in Indiana Motor Trend named the Tundra Truck of the Year and the 2007 Toyota Camry Car of the Year for 2007 It also began the construction of two new factories one in Woodstock Ontario Canada and the other in Blue Springs Mississippi USA The company was number one in global automobile sales for the first quarter of 2008 47 Toyota was hit by the global financial crisis of 2008 as it was forced in December 2008 to forecast its first annual loss in 70 years 48 In January 2009 it announced the closure of all of its Japanese plants for 11 days to reduce output and stocks of unsold vehicles 49 In October 2009 Toyota announced that they were establishing an office in South Korea and launched the Camry sedan Camry hybrid Prius and the RAV4 during the launching event at the Grand Hyatt Seoul 50 Between 2009 and 2011 Toyota conducted recalls of millions of vehicles after reports that several drivers experienced unintended acceleration The recalls were to prevent a front driver s side floor mat from sliding into the foot pedal well causing the pedals to become trapped and to correct the possible mechanical sticking of the accelerator pedal 51 At least 37 were killed in crashes allegedly related to unintended acceleration 52 approximately 9 million cars and trucks were recalled 53 Toyota was sued for personal injuries and wrongful deaths 54 paid US 1 billion to settle a class action lawsuit to compensate owners for lost resale value 55 and paid a US 1 2 billion criminal penalty to the United States government over accusations that it had intentionally hid information about safety defects and had made deceptive statements to protect its brand image 56 Akio Toyoda was named President of Toyota in 2009 pictured in 2011 Amid the unintended acceleration scandal Katsuaki Watanabe stepped down as company president He was replaced by Akio Toyoda grandson of company founder Kiichiro Toyoda on June 23 2009 Akio had been with Toyota since 1984 working jobs in production marketing and product development and took a seat on the board of directors in 2000 57 Akio s promotion by the board marked the return of a member of the Toyoda family to the top leadership role for the first time since 1999 58 2010s Edit In 2011 Toyota along with large parts of the Japanese automotive industry suffered from a series of natural disasters The 2011 Tōhoku earthquake and tsunami led to a severe disruption of the supplier base and a drop in production and exports 59 60 Severe flooding during the 2011 monsoon season in Thailand affected Japanese automakers that had chosen Thailand as a production base Toyota is estimated to have lost production of 150 000 units to the tsunami and production of 240 000 units to the floods On February 10 2014 it was announced that Toyota would cease manufacturing vehicles and engines in Australia by the end of 2017 61 62 The decision was based on the unfavourable Australian dollar making exports not viable the high cost of local manufacture and the high amount of competition in a relatively small local market 62 The company planned to consolidate its corporate functions in Melbourne by the end of 2017 and retain its Altona plant for other functions The workforce is expected to be reduced from 3 900 to 1 300 63 Both Ford Motor Company and General Motors Holden followed suit ending Australian production in 2016 and 2017 respectively The automaker narrowly topped global sales for the first half of 2014 selling 5 1 million vehicles in the six months ending June 30 2014 an increase of 3 8 on the same period the previous year Volkswagen AG which recorded sales of 5 07 million vehicles was close behind 64 In August 2014 Toyota announced it would be cutting its spare parts prices in China by up to 35 The company admitted the move was in response to a probe foreshadowed earlier in the month by China s National Development and Reform Commission of Toyota s Lexus spare parts policies as part of an industry wide investigation into what the Chinese regulator considers exorbitantly high prices being charged by automakers for spare parts and after sales servicing 65 In November 2015 the company announced that it would invest US 1 billion over the next 5 years into artificial intelligence and robotics research 66 In 2016 Toyota invested in Uber 67 In 2020 a corporate governance report showed that Toyota owns 10 25 million shares of Uber which was valued at 292 46 million as of March 30 2020 According to Reuters this was roughly 0 6 per cent of Uber s outstanding shares 68 In March 2016 Toyota partnered with Yanmar to create a fiberglass pleasure boat using Yanmar outboard marine diesel engines or Toyota inboard engines 69 In August 2016 the company purchased all remaining assets of Daihatsu making the manufacturer of small cars a wholly owned subsidiary of Toyota 70 On August 27 2018 Toyota announced an investment of US 500 million in Uber s autonomous cars 71 2020s Edit By 2020 Toyota reclaimed its position as the largest automaker in the world surpassing Volkswagen 72 It sold 9 528 million vehicles globally despite an 11 3 drop in sales due to the COVID 19 pandemic 72 This includes subsidiaries Daihatsu and Hino Motors 72 73 On April 2 2020 BYD and Toyota announced a new joint venture between the two companies called BYD Toyota EV Technology Co Ltd with the aim of developing BEVs Battery Electric Vehicles that appeal to customers 74 In March 2021 Toyota its subsidiary Hino and Isuzu announced the creation of a strategic partnership between the three companies Toyota acquired a 4 6 stake in Isuzu while the latter plans to acquire Toyota shares for an equivalent value The three companies said they would form a new joint venture by April called Commercial Japan Partnership Technologies Corporation with the aim of developing fuel cell and electric light trucks Toyota would own an 80 stake in the venture while Hino and Isuzu would own 10 each 75 In April 2021 Toyota said that it will buy Lyft s self driving technology unit for 550 million and merge it with its newly created Woven Planet Holdings automation division 76 In June 2021 the company defended its donations to United States Republican lawmakers after they voted against certifying the results of the 2020 presidential election saying it did not believe it was appropriate to judge members of Congress for that one vote 77 A report by Axios found that Toyota was the top donor to 2020 election objectors by a substantial margin 78 The company then reversed course in July 2021 and ceased donations to election objectors releasing a statement saying it understood that its PAC s donations to those objectors which far outpaced those of any other company troubled some stakeholders 79 In December 2021 Toyota announced that it would invest 8 000 000 000 000 70 billion at 2021 exchange rate in electric vehicles by 2030 launch 30 EV models worldwide by that year and set a sales target of 3 5 million electric vehicles in 2030 80 Toyota will increase its software engineer intake to around 40 to 50 of all technical hires from the second quarter of 2022 the move plans to address a transformation to so called CASE connected autonomous shared and electric technologies in an environment of intensifying global competition 81 In 2021 Toyota told some of its suppliers to increase their semiconductor inventory levels from the conventional three months to five months in response to the COVID 19 chip shortage 82 The just in time supply chain in which parts are only delivered when necessary had already been revised after the March 11 2011 earthquake and tsunami in Japan lifting inventories across the entire procurement network 82 The time it takes Toyota to turn over its inventory increased by around 40 during the past ten years to 36 36 days as of March 2021 update 82 In August 2022 Toyota pledged up to 5 6 billion towards production of electric vehicle battery production and announced an increase in investment in its plant near Greensboro North Carolina 83 84 In January 2023 Toyota CEO and President Akio Toyoda announced that he was stepping down and passing the position on to Koji Sato Akio is the great grandson of company founder Rizaburo Toyoda Sato had previously run Lexus Toyota s luxury car brand The change is set to take effect on April 1 2023 85 86 Senior leadership EditChairman Takeshi Uchiyamada since June 2013 President Akio Toyoda since June 2009 List of former chairmen Edit In 1950 Toyota was split into Toyota Motor Co and Toyota Motor Sales Co sales arm of Toyota the two companies merged in 1982 to create one unified company with then Toyota Motor Co President Eiji Toyoda becoming Chairman Chairmen listed prior to 1982 below were for the pre merger Toyota Motor Co only 87 88 Rizaburo Toyoda 1937 1948 Taizo Ishida 1948 1952 Shoichi Saito 1952 1959 Masaya Hanai 1959 1982 Eiji Toyoda 1982 1994 Shoichiro Toyoda 1994 1999 Hiroshi Okuda 1999 89 2006 Fujio Cho 2006 90 2013 List of former presidents Edit Similar to the chairman position in 1982 the then Toyota Motor Sales Co President Shoichiro Toyoda becoming President President s listed prior to 1982 below were for the pre merger Toyota Motor Co only 87 91 Rizaburo Toyoda 1937 1941 Kiichiro Toyoda 1941 1950 Taizo Ishida 1950 1961 Fukio Nakagawa 1961 1967 Eiji Toyoda 1967 1982 Shoichiro Toyoda 1982 92 1992 Tatsuro Toyoda 1992 1995 93 Hiroshi Okuda 1995 94 1999 Fujio Cho 1999 2005 90 Katsuaki Watanabe 2005 2009 95 Product line EditFurther information List of Toyota vehicles Best selling Toyota and Lexusnameplates globally FY2021 96 Rankin Toyota Model Sales thousands of units 1 Toyota Corolla 1 3122 Toyota RAV4 9803 Toyota Yaris 7434 Toyota Camry 6855 Toyota Hilux 6056 Toyota Highlander 4667 Toyota Tacoma 2688 Toyota C HR 2359 Toyota Levin 22110 Lexus RX 199As of 2009 Toyota officially lists approximately 70 different models sold under its namesake brand including sedans coupes vans trucks hybrids and crossovers 97 Many of these models are produced as passenger sedans which range from the subcompact Toyota Yaris compact Corolla to mid size Camry and full size Avalon 97 Minivans include the Innova Alphard Vellfire Sienna and others 97 Several small cars such as the xB and tC were sold under the Scion brand 97 SUVs and crossovers Edit Toyota C HR Toyota RAV4 Toyota SUV and crossover line up grew quickly in the late 2010s to 2020s due to the market shift to SUVs Toyota crossovers range from the subcompact Yaris Cross and C HR compact Corolla Cross and RAV4 to midsize Harrier Venza and Kluger Highlander 97 Other crossovers include the Raize Urban Cruiser 98 Toyota SUVs range from the midsize Fortuner to full size Land Cruiser 97 Other SUVs include the Rush Prado FJ Cruiser 4Runner and Sequoia 97 Pickup trucks Edit Toyota Hilux global Toyota Tacoma US Canada Toyota first entered the pickup truck market in 1947 with the SB that was only sold in Japan and limited Asian markets It was followed in 1954 by the RK renamed in 1959 as the Stout and in 1968 by the compact Hilux With continued refinement the Hilux simply known as the Pickup in some markets became famous for being extremely durable and reliable 99 Extended cab and crew cab versions were eventually added and Toyota continues to produce them today under various names depending on the market in various cab lengths with gasoline or diesel engines and 2WD and 4WD versions In North America the Hilux became a major model for the company leading the company to launch the Tacoma in 1995 100 The Tacoma was based on the Hilux but with a design intended to better suit the needs of North American consumers who often use pickup trucks as personal vehicles The design was a success and the Tacoma became the best selling compact pickup in North America After the success of its compact Hilux pickups in North America Toyota decided to enter the full size pickup market which was traditionally dominated by domestic automakers The company introduced the T100 for the 1993 US model year The T100 had a full size 8 foot 2 4 m long bed but suspension and engine characteristics were similar to that of a compact pickup Sales were disappointing and the T100 was criticized for having a small V6 engine especially compared to the V8 engines common in American full size trucks lacking an extended cab version being too small and too expensive because of the 25 tariff on imported trucks 101 In 1995 Toyota added the more powerful V6 engine from the new Tacoma to the T100 and also added an extended cab version 101 In 1999 Toyota replaced the T100 with the larger Tundra which would be built in the US with a V8 engine and styling that more closely matched other American full size trucks 102 Luxury vehicles Edit See also Lexus Toyota Crown RS fifteenth generation S220 2018 In the Japanese home market Toyota has two flagship models the Crown premium sedan and the Century limousine In the 1980s Toyota wanted to expand its luxury car offerings but realized that existing Japanese market flagship models had little global appeal and could not compete with established brands such as Mercedes Benz BMW and Jaguar or the Acura and Infiniti marquees being launched by Japanese competitors Before the decade was out Toyota introduced Lexus a new division that was formed to market and service luxury vehicles in markets outside of Japan The company developed the brand and its vehicles in secret since August 1983 at a cost of over US 1 billion 42 43 The Lexus LS flagship full size sedan debuted in 1989 to strong sales and was largely responsible for the successful launch of the Lexus marque Subsequently the division added sedan coupe convertible and SUV models The Lexus brand was introduced to the Japanese market in 2005 previously all vehicles marketed internationally as Lexus from 1989 to 2005 were released in Japan under the Toyota marque Buses Edit The Toyota Coaster is a minibus introduced in 1969 that seats 17 passengers The Coaster is widely used in Japan Singapore Hong Kong and Australia but also in the developing world for minibus operators in Africa the Middle East South Asia the Caribbean and South America to operate as public transportation Technology EditHybrid electric vehicles Edit Main articles Hybrid Synergy Drive Hybrid electric vehicle and Toyota Prius The Toyota Prius flagship of Toyota s hybrid technology is the world s best selling hybrid car Toyota is the world s leader in sales of hybrid electric vehicles one of the largest companies to encourage the mass market adoption of hybrid vehicles across the globe and the first to commercially mass produce and sell such vehicles with the introduction of the Toyota Prius in 1997 103 104 The company s series hybrid technology is called Hybrid Synergy Drive and it was later applied to many vehicles in Toyota s product lineup starting first with the Camry and the technology was also brought to the luxury Lexus division As of January 2020 update Toyota Motor Corporation sells 44 Toyota and Lexus hybrid passenger car models in over 90 countries and regions around the world and the carmaker has sold over 15 million hybrid vehicles since 1997 105 The Prius family is the world s top selling hybrid gasoline electric vehicle nameplate with almost 4 million units sold worldwide as of January 2017 105 Besides the Prius Toyota s current hybrid lineup includes the Alphard Vellfire Crown Vellfire Avalon Aqua Camry C HR IZOA Corolla Levin Corolla Cross Frontlander Crown Harrier Venza Highlander Kluger Crown Kluger Innova Noah Voxy Raize RAV4 Wildlander Sequoia Sienna Sienta Tundra Urban Cruiser Hyryder Yaris and Yaris Cross The Lexus current hybrid lineup consists of the ES IS LC LM LS NX RC RX and UX Plug in hybrids Edit Main articles Toyota Prius Plug in Hybrid and Toyota RAV4 Prime Second generation Toyota Prius Plug in Hybrid The Prius Plug In Hybrid Concept was exhibited in late 2009 and shortly after a global demonstration program involving 600 pre production test cars began The vehicles were leased to fleet and government customers and were equipped with data tracking devices to allow Toyota to monitor the car s performance The vehicle was based on the third generation Toyota Prius and outfitted with two additional lithium ion batteries beyond the normal hybrid battery pack 106 The additional batteries were used to operate the car with minimal use of the internal combustion engine until they are depleted at which point they are disengaged from the system They are not used in tandem with the main hybrid battery pack After the conclusion of the demonstration program the production version of the Prius Plug in Hybrid was unveiled in September 2011 The production Prius Plug in had a maximum electric only speed of 100 km h 62 mph and the United States Environmental Protection Agency EPA rated the vehicle as having an range of 18 kilometres 11 mi in blended mode mostly electric but supplemented by the internal combustion engine 107 Toyota ultimately only did a small production run with 75 400 vehicles being produced between 2012 and 2016 108 The second generation Prius Plug in renamed the Prius Prime in the US was unveiled in early 2016 109 Unlike the prior generation where the plug in battery was limited by being added to the existing Prius this model would be developed in tandem with the fourth generation Prius allowing Toyota to increase the range to 40 kilometres 25 mi with a top speed of 135 km h 84 mph without needing the assistance of the internal combustion engine 110 The second generation Prius Plug in went on sale starting in late 2016 with Toyota expecting to sell up to 60 000 units globally per year 111 A second plug in hybrid model the Toyota RAV4 PHV RAV4 Prime in the US was unveiled in December 2019 The vehicle has an EPA estimated 68 kilometres 42 mi of all electric range and generates a combined 225 kilowatts 302 hp enabling it to be Toyota s second fastest car currently in production behind the GR Supra 3 0 sports car 112 Sales started in mid 2020 Battery electric vehicles Edit Toyota bZ4X Toyota has been criticized for being slow to add battery electric vehicles to its lineup It was publicly skeptical about battery electric technology and has lobbied against government mandates to transition to zero tailpipe emission vehicles 113 Toyota s first all electric vehicle was made in response to one of those government mandates The company created the first generation Toyota RAV4 EV after the California Air Resources Board mandated in the late 1990s that every automaker offer a zero emissions vehicle 114 115 A total of 1 484 were leased and or sold in California from 1997 to 2003 when the state dropped its mandate under legal pressure from lawsuits filed by automakers At the lessees request many units were sold after the vehicle was discontinued 116 A second generation of the RAV4 EV was developed in 2010 as part of a deal with Tesla The production version was unveiled in August 2012 using battery pack electronics and powertrain components from the Tesla Model S 117 The RAV4 EV had a limited production run which resulted in just under 3 000 vehicles being produced before it was discontinued in 2014 118 119 According to Bloomberg News the partnership between Tesla and Toyota was marred by clashes between engineers 120 Starting in 2009 Toyota introduced three generations of concept electric vehicles called the FT EV built on a modified Toyota iQ platform In late 2012 the company announced plans build a production version of the car called the Toyota iQ EV Scion iQ EV in the US Toyota eQ in Japan 121 but ultimately production was cut back to 100 cars for special fleet use in Japan and the U S only 122 In late 2012 Toyota announced that it would back away from fully electric vehicles after producing less than 5 000 At the time the company s vice chairman Takeshi Uchiyamada said The current capabilities of electric vehicles do not meet society s needs whether it may be the distance the cars can run or the costs or how it takes a long time to charge Toyota s emphasis would be re focused on the hybrids and hydrogen fuel cell vehicles 122 25 These early electric vehicles are widely considered as compliance cars meaning that it is developed to meet California s zero emissions standards for automakers 123 Akio Toyoda shows prototypes of 15 BEVs during Toyota s briefing on BEV strategies in December 2021 A shift in Toyota s formerly battery agnostic posture could be seen as early as 2016 when Toyota s CFO Takahiko Ijichi sent a strong signal that Toyota soon plans to jump on the battery bandwagon and make electric cars despite expressing skeptical views about their range and charging times as the Wall Street Journal wrote 124 Toyota said it would make and sell battery electric vehicles if and where regulations and markets demand A year later Toyota outlined its electric vehicle plans for between 2020 and 2030 to the press in Tokyo saying it would introduce more than 10 battery electric vehicles worldwide by the early 2020s beginning in China and later in Japan Europe the US and India 125 In April 2019 Toyota introduced the C HR EV its first mass produced pure electric model in China along with an identical twin called the IZOA EV 126 It went on sale in April 2020 and May 2020 respectively Nikkei reported in October 2020 that Toyota had only sold less than 2 000 units in the first eight months of the year 127 Toyota introduced the C pod in late 2020 a 2 seater kei car with an estimated range of 100 kilometres 62 mi and a top speed of 60 kilometres per hour 37 mph 128 129 In April 2021 Toyota revealed the bZ4X an electric crossover SUV that will be the first vehicle built on a dedicated electric platform called e TNGA when it goes on sale in mid 2022 130 It is the first model of the bZ beyond Zero series of battery electric vehicles 131 The company has also stated that there will be seven bZ models to be launched globally out of 15 BEV models by 2025 132 In December 2021 Toyota announced in Tokyo plans for 30 battery electric models by 2030 to sell 3 5 million BEVs per year by that date and that its premium brand Lexus will be 100 battery operated by 2030 in North America Europe and China The company announced investments of 70 billion into the company s electrification 133 Toyota has been developing solid state batteries in partnership with Panasonic in which the company has more than a thousand patents covering solid state batteries by late 2020 134 The technology has been implemented on the Toyota LQ concept Toyota hopes the technology could increase efficiency of battery electric vehicles by 30 percent which in turn would reduce battery costs by the same amount 134 Hydrogen fuel cell Edit See also Toyota Mirai The Toyota Mirai fuel cell vehicle The Toyota SORA fuel cell bus In 2002 Toyota began a development and demonstration program to test the Toyota FCHV a hybrid hydrogen fuel cell vehicle based on the Toyota Highlander production SUV Toyota also built a FCHV bus based on the Hino Blue Ribbon City low floor bus 135 136 Toyota has built several prototypes concepts of the FCHV since 1997 including the Toyota FCHV 1 FCHV 2 FCHV 3 FCHV 4 and Toyota FCHV adv The Toyota FCV R fuel cell concept car was unveiled at the 2011 Tokyo Motor Show The FCV R sedan seats four and has a fuel cell stack including a 70 MPa high pressure hydrogen tank which can deliver a range of 435 mi 700 km under the Japanese JC08 test cycle Toyota said the car was planned for launch in about 2015 137 In August 2012 Toyota announced its plans to start retail sales of a hydrogen fuel cell sedan in California in 2015 Toyota expects to become a leader in this technology 138 The prototype of its first hydrogen fuel cell vehicle will be exhibited at the November 2013 Tokyo Motor Show and in the United States at the January 2014 Consumer Electronics Show 139 Toyota s first hydrogen fuel cell vehicles to be sold commercially the Toyota Mirai Japanese for future was unveiled at the November 2014 Los Angeles Auto Show 140 In January 2015 it was announced that production of the Mirai fuel cell vehicle would increase from 700 units in 2015 to approximately 2 000 in 2016 and 3 000 in 2017 141 Sales in Japan began on December 15 2014 at a price of 6 700 000 US 57 400 The Japanese government plans to support the commercialization of fuel cell vehicles with a subsidy of 2 000 000 US 19 600 142 Retail sales in the U S began in August 2015 at a price of US 57 500 before any government incentives Initially the Mirai will only be available in California 143 144 The market release in Europe is slated for September 2015 and initially will be available only in the UK Germany and Denmark followed by other countries in 2017 Pricing in Germany starts at 60 000 US 75 140 plus VAT 78 540 145 In 2015 Toyota released 5 600 patents for free use until 2020 hoping to promote global development of hydrogen fuel cell technology 146 147 148 149 Autonomous vehicles Edit Toyota e Palette Toyota is regarded as being behind in smart car technology and in need of innovation 150 Although the company Toyota unveiled its first self driving test vehicle in 2017 and has been developing its own self driving technology named Chauffeur intended for full self driving and Guardian a driver assist system neither of these has been introduced into any production vehicles 151 The company had set up a large research and development operation by 2018 spending almost US 4 billion to start an autonomous vehicle research institute in California s Silicon Valley 150 and another 300 billion on a similar research institute in Tokyo that would partner with fellow Toyota Group companies and automotive suppliers Aisin Seiki and Denso 152 153 Toyota has also been collaborating with autonomous vehicle technology developers and in some cases purchasing the companies Toyota has acquired the autonomous vehicle division of ride hailing service Lyft for 550 million 154 invested a total of US 1 billion in competing ride hailing service Uber s self driving vehicle division 155 156 invested 400 million in autonomous vehicle technology company Pony ai 157 and announced a partnership with Chinese electronics e commerce company Cogobuy to build a Smart Car Ecosystem 158 In December 2020 Toyota showcased the 20 passenger e Palette shared autonomous vehicle which was used at the 2021 Tokyo Olympic Games 159 160 Toyota has announced it intends to have the vehicle available for commercial applications before 2025 161 Since February 2021 Toyota has been building the sensor laden Woven City which it calls a 175 acre high tech sensor laden metropolis at the foot of Mount Fuji When completed in 2024 the Woven City will be used to run tests on autonomous vehicles for deliveries transport and mobile shops with the city s residents participating in the living laboratory experiment 162 163 Motorsports EditMain article Toyota in motorsport See also Toyota Gazoo Racing and Toyota Racing Development The Toyota TS050 Hybrid that won the 2018 24 Hours of Le Mans preserved with dirt from the race Toyota has been involved in many global motorsports series providing vehicles engines and other auto parts under both the Toyota and Lexus brands Toyota Gazoo Racing GR is Toyota s performance brand that is used in many of the world s major motorsports contests Toyota Gazoo Racing Europe based in Cologne Germany competes in the FIA World Endurance Championship while the Finland based Toyota Gazoo Racing WRT participates in the World Rally Championship Toyota Gazoo Racing South Africa competes in the Dakar Rally Between 2002 and 2009 the Toyota Racing team competed in Formula One Toyota won the 24 Hours of Le Mans in 2018 2019 and 2020 with a Toyota TS050 Hybrid and in 2021 with a Toyota GR010 Hybrid Toyota Racing Development USA TRD USA is responsible for participation in major motorsports contests in the United States including NASCAR NHRA Indy Racing League and Formula Drift Toyota also makes engines and other auto parts for other Japanese motorsports including Super Formula Super GT Formula 3 and Toyota Racing Series Non automotive activities EditAerospace Edit Toyota is a minority shareholder in Mitsubishi Aircraft Corporation having invested US 67 2 million in the new venture which will produce the Mitsubishi Regional Jet slated for first deliveries in 2017 164 Toyota has also studied participation in the general aviation market and contracted with Scaled Composites to produce a proof of concept aircraft the TAA 1 in 2002 165 166 Pleasure boats Edit In 1997 building on a previous partnership with Yamaha Marine Toyota created Toyota Marine 167 building private ownership motorboats currently sold only in Japan A small network in Japan sells the luxury craft at 54 locations called the Toyota Ponam series and in 2017 a boat was labeled under the Lexus brand name starting May 26 2017 168 Philanthropy Edit The Toyota Municipal Museum of Art in Aichi sponsored by the manufacturer Toyota supports a variety of philanthropic work in areas such as education conservation safety and disaster relief Some of the organizations that Toyota has worked with in the US include the American Red Cross the Boys and Girls Club Leaders in Environmental Action for the Future LEAF and the National Center for Family Literacy 169 The Toyota USA Foundation exists to support education in the areas of science technology engineering and mathematics 170 In addition Toyota works with nonprofits to improve their processes and operations such as the Food Bank For New York City 171 172 Toyota also supports a variety of work in Japan 173 The Toyota Foundation takes a global perspective providing grants in the three areas of human and natural environments social welfare and education and culture 174 Higher education Edit Toyota established the Toyota Technological Institute in 1981 as Sakichi Toyoda had planned to establish a university as soon as he and Toyota became successful Toyota Technological Institute founded the Toyota Technological Institute at Chicago in 2003 Toyota is supporter of the Toyota Driving Expectations Program Toyota Youth for Understanding Summer Exchange Scholarship Program Toyota International Teacher Program Toyota TAPESTRY Toyota Community Scholars scholarship for high school students United States Hispanic Chamber of Commerce Internship Program and Toyota Funded Scholarship 175 It has contributed to a number of local education and scholarship programs for the University of Kentucky Indiana and others 175 Robotics Edit Main article Toyota Partner Robot Toyota trumpet playing robot In 2004 Toyota showcased its trumpet playing robot 176 Toyota has been developing multitask robots destined for elderly care manufacturing and entertainment A specific example of Toyota s involvement in robotics for the elderly is the Brain Machine Interface Designed for use with wheelchairs it allows a person to control an electric wheelchair accurately almost in real time with his or her mind 177 The thought controls allow the wheelchair to go left right and forward with a delay between thought and movement of just 125 milliseconds 177 Toyota also played a part in the development of Kirobo a robotic astronaut In 2017 the company introduced T HR3 a humanoid robot with the ability to be remotely controlled The robot can copy the motions of a connected person The 2017 version used wires for the connection but the 2018 version used 5G from a distance up to 10 km 178 179 Agricultural biotechnology Edit Toyota invests in several small start up businesses and partnerships in biotechnology including P T Toyota Bio Indonesia in Lampung Indonesia Australian Afforestation Pty Ltd in Western Australia and Southern Australia Toyota Floritech Co Ltd in Rokkasho Mura Kamikita District Aomori Prefecture Sichuan Toyota Nitan Development Co Ltd in Sichuan China Toyota Roof Garden Corporation in Miyoshi Cho Aichi PrefectureSewing machine brand Edit Aisin another member of the Toyota Group of companies uses the same Toyota wordmark logo to market its home use sewing machines Aisin was founded by Kiichiro Toyoda after he founded the Toyota Motor Corporation According to Aisin he was so pleased with the first sewing machine he decided to apply the same Toyota branding as his auto business despite the companies being independent from each other 180 Carbon removal Edit Further information Carbon capture and utilization Carbon footprint Electrochemical reduction of carbon dioxide and Heterogeneous catalysis Toyota Ventures along with JetBlue Technology Ventures and Parley for the Oceans is among the corporate investors that have invested 40 million in the Air Company a carbon negative vodka distiller and perfume and hand sanitizer manufacturer that uses heterogeneous catalysis to convert captured carbon into ethanol 181 Controversies EditCorrosion lawsuit Edit In November 2016 Toyota agreed to pay 3 4 billion to settle allegations that roughly one and a half million of its Tacoma Tundra and Sequoia pickup trucks and SUVs had been outfitted with frames prone to corrosion and perforation According to court papers the corrosion could reach levels high enough to compromise the vehicle s structural integrity 182 Death from overwork Edit See also Karōshi On February 9 2002 Kenichi Uchino aged 30 years a quality control manager collapsed then died at work 183 184 On January 2 2006 an unnamed chief engineer of the Camry Hybrid aged 45 years died from heart failure in his bed 183 Fines for environmental breaches Edit In 2003 Toyota was fined 34M for violating the United States Clean Air Act 185 In January 2021 Toyota was fined 180M for violating U S emissions regulations from 2005 to 2015 186 187 188 At the time this was the biggest civil penalty ever levied for violating United States Environmental Protection Agency emission reporting requirements 186 187 2009 2011 unintended acceleration recalls Edit See also 2009 2011 Toyota vehicle recalls Between 2009 and 2011 Toyota under pressure from the U S National Highway Traffic Safety Administration NHTSA conducted recalls of millions of vehicles after reports that several drivers experienced unintended acceleration The first recall in November 2009 was to prevent a front driver s side floor mat from sliding into the foot pedal well causing the pedals to become trapped The second recall in January 2010 was begun after some crashes were shown not to have been caused by floor mats and may be caused by possible mechanical sticking of the accelerator pedal 51 Worldwide approximately 9 million cars and trucks were impacted by the recalls 53 NHTSA received reports of a total of 37 deaths allegedly related to unintended acceleration although an exact number was never verified 52 As a result of the problems Toyota faced nearly 100 lawsuits from the families of those killed drivers who were injured vehicle owners who lost resale value and investors who saw a drop in the value of their shares While most of the personal injury and wrongful death lawsuits were settled confidentially 54 Toyota did spend more than US 1 billion to settle a class action lawsuit to compensate owners for lost resale value 55 and the company agreed to pay a US 1 2 billion criminal penalty to the United States government over accusations that it had intentionally hid information about safety defects from the public and had made deceptive statements to protect its brand image The penalty was the largest ever levied against a car company 56 Takata airbag recalls Edit See also Takata airbag recalls Toyota was impacted by a recall of faulty airbag inflators made by Takata The inflators can explode shooting metal fragments into the vehicle cabin Millions of vehicles produced between 2000 and 2014 were impacted by the recall with some needing multiple repairs 189 190 June 2010 Chinese labour strike Edit On June 21 2010 a Chinese labor strike happened in Tianjin Toyoda Gosei Co Tianjin Toyoda Gosei Co supplies parts to Tianjin FAW Toyota Motor Co 191 Opposition to California s fuel efficiency standards Edit In October 2019 Toyota backed the Trump Administration s proposal that federal authority should override California s ability to set its own emissions standards for automobiles The proposal would reduce California s 2025 fuel efficiency standard from about 54 5 to 37 MPG 192 This shift by Toyota away from fuel efficiency damaged the company s reputation as a green brand 193 186 Greenwashing controversies Edit Toyota has repeatedly been the subject of greenwashing controversies owing to their criticism of electric cars while promoting hydrogen and hybrid vehicles with the manner in which they have advertised and marketed hybrid vehicles causing particular consternation 194 195 196 Toyota President Akio Toyoda has made repeated statements about electric cars claiming that they are overhyped and that the more EVs we build the worse carbon dioxide gets 197 This stance has led Transport amp Environment to rank Toyota as the least ready OEM to transition to battery electric vehicles by 2030 stating Toyota has not set a target for 2030 and it plans to produce just 10 BEVs in 2025 It is expected to rely on polluting hybrid technologies 198 Alongside their commitment to hybrid vehicles Toyota has repeatedly stated its commitment to producing hydrogen cars claiming that they will be the future of the company 199 200 201 Many journalists and environmental activists have accused Toyota of greenwashing due to their stance on hydrogen vehicles in the face of clear evidence that they are considerably less efficient than battery electric cars and will create more greenhouse gas emissions due to energy intensity of the hydrogen extraction process 202 203 204 205 Self charging hybrids Edit In 2019 Toyota launched a global campaign for its self proclaimed self charging hybrid vehicles which use fossil fuel to charge the on board batteries in their cars rather than using an external electricity source as with plug in hybrids The language around self charging hybrids caused much consumer criticism that this was misleading as the vehicles did not self charge but instead required users to input fossil fuels and these vehicles could not run on electric power alone as was made clear during the COVID 19 pandemic when Toyota contacted the owners of these vehicles to inform them of the need to regularly refuel the vehicles with fossil fuels 206 207 Complaints about self charging hybrid advertising were recorded in multiple countries 208 and in 2020 the Norwegian Consumer Authority banned the adverts outright in Norway for misleading consumers 209 stating It is misleading to give the impression that the power to the hybrid battery is free of charge since the electricity produced by the car has consumption of gasoline as a necessary condition 210 Later in 2020 a study by Transport amp Environment 211 212 concluded that real world CO2 emissions from hybrid vehicles were on average over two and a half times those of official test values 213 214 Another report found that even the most efficient hybrid vehicles produce at least 40 70 of the emissions of a petrol or diesel car and will have created 15 more emissions in its manufacturer than a battery electric vehicle would have 215 216 217 As the world s biggest producer and marketer of hybrid vehicles Toyota has attracted the greatest attention in the wake of these reports given that the Japanese manufacturer plans to increase hybrid production at a time when most major manufacturers are switching to solely producing electric vehicles by 2035 due to the contribution of cars to the climate crisis 218 219 This was compounded in early 2021 when Toyota was fined a record 180 million for failing to comply with the Clean Air Act s emissions reporting requirements from 2005 to 2015 220 221 222 Misleading marketing Edit Toyota has also drawn negative attention for its marketing campaigns which use studies funded by the manufacturer to substantiate claims about the efficiency of their vehicles An expose by IrishEVs found that Toyota Ireland had paid University College Dublin to conduct a study of just seven cars over seven days to make claims about the efficiency of their hybrid vehicles 223 224 Furthermore Toyota Ireland had consistently used funded polls to substantiate claims about their CO2 emissions and their perception as a leading brand tackling climate change in Ireland No data or evidence was offered to validate these claims 225 Wheels falling off Edit In June 2022 Toyota recalled 2 700 of its first mass produced all electric vehicles due to worries that their wheels could fall off during driving It was discovered that the bolts on the bZ4X s wheels could loosen up to the point where the wheel simply detaches from the car causing a loss of control over the vehicle and possible accident 226 Corporate affairs Edit Principal headquarters building of Toyota Toyota is headquartered in the city of Toyota 227 which was named Koromo until 1951 when it changed its name to match the automaker Toyota City is located in the Aichi Prefecture of Japan The main headquarters of Toyota is located in a four story building that has been described as modest 228 In 2013 company CEO Akio Toyoda reported that it had difficulties retaining foreign employees at the headquarters due to the lack of amenities in the city 229 Surrounding the headquarters are the 14 story Toyota Technical Center and the Honsha plant which was established in 1938 Toyota and its Toyota Group affiliates operate a total of 17 manufacturing facilities in Aichi Prefecture and a total of 32 plants in Japan Toyota also operates offices in Bunkyo Tokyo and Nakamura ku Nagoya 227 Worldwide presence Edit See also List of Toyota manufacturing facilities Top 10 Toyota and Lexus vehicle salesby country 2021 230 Rankin Toyota Location Vehiclesales1 United States 2 332 2622 China 1 944 0103 Japan 1 476 1364 GCC 331 7865 Indonesia 291 4996 Thailand 239 7237 Australia 232 9328 Canada 225 2159 Brazil 173 47510 Taiwan 146 009Outside of Japan as one of the world s largest automotive manufacturer by production volume Toyota has factories in most parts of the world The company assembles vehicles in Argentina Belgium Brazil Canada Colombia the Czech Republic France Indonesia Mexico the Philippines Poland Russia South Africa Thailand Turkey the United Kingdom the United States and Venezuela Additionally the company also has joint venture licensed or contract factories in China France India Malaysia Pakistan Taiwan the United States and Vietnam North America Edit Main article Toyota Motor North America The Toyota Camry is assembled in several facilities around the world including Australia China Taiwan Japan Malaysia the Philippines Russia Thailand India Vietnam and the United States Toyota Motor North America is headquartered in Plano Texas and operates as a holding company for all operations of the Toyota Motor Corporation in Canada Mexico and the United States Toyota s operations in North America began on October 31 1957 and the current company was established in 2017 from the consolidation of three companies Toyota Motor North America Inc which controlled Toyota s corporate functions Toyota Motor Sales U S A Inc which handled marketing sales and distribution in the United States and Toyota Motor Engineering amp Manufacturing North America which oversaw operations at all assembly plants in the region While all three companies continue to exist in legal name they operate as one company out of one headquarters campus Toyota has a large presence in the United States with six major assembly plants in Huntsville Alabama Georgetown Kentucky Princeton Indiana San Antonio Texas Buffalo West Virginia and Blue Springs Mississippi In 2018 Toyota and Mazda announced a joint venture plant that will produce vehicles in Huntsville Alabama starting in 2021 231 It has started producing larger trucks such as the new Tundra to go after the full size pickup market in the United States Toyota is also pushing hybrid electric vehicle in the US such as the Prius Camry Hybrid Highlander Hybrid and various Lexus products Currently Toyota has no plans to offer diesel motor options in its North American products including pickup trucks 232 Toyota Canada Inc which is part of Toyota Motor North America handles marketing sales and distribution in Canada Toyota Motor Manufacturing Canada operates three assembly plants two in Cambridge Ontario and one in Woodstock Ontario 233 In 2006 Toyota s subsidiary Hino Motors opened a heavy duty truck plant also in Woodstock employing 45 people and producing 2 000 trucks annually 234 Europe Western Asia Edit Main article Toyota Motor Europe Top 10 Toyota and Lexus vehicle productionby country 2021 230 Rankin Toyota Location Vehicleproduction1 Japan 2 877 9622 China 1 649 6533 United States 1 144 7224 Thailand 513 8365 Canada 427 0566 Turkey 228 5577 Mexico 222 3428 France 205 7149 Indonesia 186 08510 Brazil 171 283Toyota Motor Europe is headquartered in Brussels Belgium and oversees all operations of the Toyota Motor Corporation in Europe and western Asia Toyota s operations in Europe began in 1963 Toyota has a significant presence in Europe with nine production facilities in Kolin Czech Republic Burnaston England Deeside England Onnaing France Jelcz Laskowice Poland Walbrzych Poland Ovar Portugal Saint Petersburg Russia and Arifiye Turkey 235 Toyota also operates a joint venture plant with Citroen and Peugeot in Valenciennes France Australia Edit Main article Toyota Australia In 1963 Australia was one of the first countries to assemble Toyotas outside Japan However in February 2014 Toyota was the last of Australia s major automakers to announce the end of production in Australia The closure of Toyota s Australian plant was completed on October 3 2017 and had produced a total 3 451 155 vehicles At its peak in October 2007 Toyota manufactured 15 000 cars a month 236 Before Toyota Ford and GM s Holden had announced similar moves all citing an unfavorable currency and attendant high manufacturing costs 237 Financials Edit Toyota is publicly traded on the Tokyo Osaka Nagoya Fukuoka and Sapporo exchanges under company code TYO 7203 In Japan Toyota s stock is a component of the Nikkei 225 and TOPIX Core30 indices In addition Toyota is foreign listed on the New York Stock Exchange under NYSE TM and on the London Stock Exchange under LSE TYT Toyota has been publicly traded in Japan since 1949 and internationally since 1999 238 Company strategy Edit New Toyota factory in Ohira near Sendai Miyagi Prefecture Japan A month after this picture was taken the region was devastated by the March 11 earthquake and tsunami The plant was only lightly damaged but remained closed more than a month mainly due to lack of supplies and energy in addition to a badly damaged Sendai port The Toyota Way Edit Main article The Toyota Way The Toyota Way is a set of principles and behaviors that underlie the company s approach to management and production which is further defined as the Toyota Production System The company has been developing its corporate philosophy since 1948 and passing it on as implicit knowledge to new employees but as the company expanded globally leaders officially identified and defined the Toyota Way in 2001 Toyota summarized it under two main pillars continuous improvement and respect for people Under the continuous improvement pillar are three principles challenge form a long term vision kaizen a continual improvement process and genchi genbutsu go and see the process to make correct decisions Under the respect for people pillar are two principles respect and teamwork 239 In 2004 Dr Jeffrey Liker a University of Michigan professor of industrial engineering published The Toyota Way In his book Liker calls the Toyota Way a system designed to provide the tools for people to continually improve their work 240 According to Liker there are 14 principles of The Toyota Way that can be organized into four themes 1 long term philosophy 2 the right process will produce the right results 3 add value to the organization by developing your people and 4 continuously solving root problems drives organizational learning The 14 principles are further defined in the Wikipedia article on The Toyota Way Toyota Production System Edit Main article Toyota Production System The Toyota Way also helped shape the company s approach to production where it was an early pioneer of what would be come to be known as lean manufacturing 241 The company defines the Toyota Production System under two main pillars just in time 242 make only what is needed only when it is needed and only in the amount that is needed and Jidoka 243 automation with a human touch The origin of the Toyota Production System is in dispute with three stories of its origin 1 that during a 1950 trip to train with the Ford Motor Company company executives also studied the just in time distribution system of the grocery store company Piggly Wiggly 244 2 that they followed the writings of W Edwards Deming 245 and 3 they learned the principles from a WWII US government training program Training Within Industry 246 After developing the Toyota Production System in its own facilities the company began teaching the system to its parts suppliers in the 1990s Other companies were interested in the instruction and Toyota later started offering training sessions The company also has donated the training to non profit groups to increase their efficiency and thus ability to serve people Logo and branding Edit Employee at the Toyota Automobile Museum explains development of Toyota name and brand In 1936 Toyota entered the passenger car market with its Model AA and held a competition to establish a new logo emphasizing speed for its new product line After receiving 27 000 entries one was selected that additionally resulted in a change of its moniker to Toyota from the family name Toyoda which means rice paddy The new name was believed to sound better and its eight stroke count in the Japanese language was associated with wealth and good fortune The original logo was a heavily stylized version of the katakana characters for Toyota トヨタ 247 As the company started to expand internationally in the late 1950s the katakana character logo was supplemented by various wordmarks with the English form of the company name in all capital letters TOYOTA 247 Toyota introduced a worldwide logo in October 1989 to commemorate the 50th year of the company and to differentiate it from the newly released luxury Lexus brand 248 The logo consists of three ovals that combine to form the letter T which stands for Toyota Toyota says that the overlapping of the two perpendicular ovals inside the larger oval represents the mutually beneficial relationship and trust between the customer and the company while the larger oval surrounding both of these inner ovals represents the global expansion of Toyota s technology and unlimited potential for the future 249 250 The new logo started appearing on all printed material advertisements dealer signage and most vehicles in 1990 In countries or regions using traditional Chinese characters e g Hong Kong and Taiwan Toyota is known as 豐田 251 In countries using simplified Chinese characters e g China and Singapore Toyota is written as 丰田 252 pronounced as Fengtian in Mandarin Chinese and Hɔng Tshan in Minnanese These are the same characters as the founding family s name Toyoda in Japanese Some new vehicles like this Tacoma still use the heritage TOYOTA wordmark Toyota still uses the katakana character logo as its corporate emblem in Japan including on the headquarters building 253 and some special edition vehicles still use the TOYOTA wordmark on the grille as a nod to the company s heritage 254 On July 15 2015 the company was delegated its own generic top level domain toyota 255 Sports sponsorships Edit Toyota sponsors several teams and has purchased naming rights for several venues and even competitions including Toyota Alvark Tokyo basketball team Toyota Cup Toyota Center Houston Texas Toyota Center Kennewick Washington Toyota Field San Antonio Texas Toyota Park Bridgeview Illinois Toyota Sports Center El Segundo California Toyota Stadium Georgetown Kentucky Toyota Stadium Frisco TexasAs of 2017 update Toyota is an official sponsor of Cricket Australia 256 the England and Wales Cricket Board 257 and the AFL 258 In March 2015 Toyota became a sponsor partner for the Olympic Games in the form of supplying vehicles and communications between vehicles until 2024 259 See also Edit Companies portalList of Toyota engines List of Toyota manufacturing facilities List of Toyota transmissions List of Toyota vehicles Nagoya Grampus formerly the company s football club and still sponsored by them Toyota model codes Toyota Verblitz the company s rugby team Toyota War a conflict between Libya and Chad which saw a heavy use of Toyota s pickup trucks References Edit Toyota Global Sales and Production Secures 90 Percent Level Year on Year in FY2021 Press release Japan Toyota Motor Corporation April 28 2021 Retrieved April 28 2021 Toyota Annual Report 2021 PDF Toyota Motor Corporation May 12 2021 Archived PDF from the original on May 27 2020 Retrieved May 12 2021 Toyota in 11 3m 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overwork The Japan Times December 1 2007 Archived from the original on February 11 2018 Retrieved June 29 2017 Mattera Phil February 11 2010 Toyota totals its corporate social responsibility cred Facing South US Retrieved January 15 2021 a b c Tabuchi Hiroko January 14 2021 Toyota to Pay a Record Fine for a Decade of Clean Air Act Violations The New York Times Archived from the original on January 14 2021 Retrieved January 15 2021 a b Prang Allison January 14 2021 Toyota to Pay 180 Million to Settle Complaint Over Delayed Emissions Defect Reports WSJ US Retrieved January 15 2021 Toyota to pay 180 million fine for failing to report and fix pollution control defects The Associated Press US January 14 2021 Retrieved January 15 2021 via Dallas News Atiyeh Clifford November 13 2014 Massive Takata Airbag Recall Everything You Need to Know Including Full List of Affected Vehicles Car and Driver Archived from the original on November 29 2014 Retrieved November 15 2014 Toyota advances plans to replace Takata airbags in 65 000 vehicles Reuters December 12 2018 Archived from the original on December 12 2018 Retrieved December 12 2018 Strike halts production at Denso plant in China June 23 2010 Archived from the original on February 11 2018 Retrieved June 25 2017 Hsu Tiffany October 29 2019 Toyota s Support of Trump Emissions Rules Shocks Californians The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on November 2 2019 Retrieved November 2 2019 Grandoni Dino July 17 2020 Analysis The Energy 202 Toyota faces revolt from eco conscious customers after siding with Trump Washington Post Archived from the original on November 6 2019 Retrieved January 15 2021 Toyota is not the only car company taking the Trump administration s side in the high stakes legal fight But Toyota s position may be particularly risky since it has spent decades cultivating an environmentally conscious reputation for pioneering the Prius the first mass market hybrid in the United States along with other hybrid cars Some Toyota owners drawn to what they thought was a green brand are in open revolt against the automaker They re sending complaints to the company taking to social media to call for boycotts and promising to buy cars that sided with California in its fight with President Trump Greenwashing automakers are failing to support electric cars putting future viability in jeopardy study says www forbes com Forbes Journal November 14 2019 These 12 car companies are setting the world on fire www greenpeace com Greenpeace September 10 2019 Smog amp Mirrors Exposing Toyota s Greenwashing at Washington Auto Show Sierra Club January 27 2022 Retrieved February 17 2022 Toyota s chief says electric vehicles are overhyped www wsj com The Wall Street Journal December 17 2020 Volvo and VW the only European carmakers on track to electrify on time study www transportenvironment com Transport amp Environment June 16 2021 Toyota doubles down on hydrogen with a new mirai and commercial trucks www autoweek com Autoweek December 21 2020 Toyota doubles down on hybrids despite china s subsidies snub www bloomberg com Bloomberg April 24 2016 Lambert Fred February 15 2022 Study confirms what common sense has made clear for years Hydrogen fuel cells cannot catch up to battery electric vehicles Electrek Retrieved February 17 2022 Hydrogen cars won t overtake electric vehicles because they re hampered by the laws of science www theconversation com The Conversation June 3 2020 Why are we still talking about hydrogen Forbes June 6 2021 Roadmap to climate friendly land freight and buses in Europe PDF www transportenvironment org Transport amp Environment June 6 2017 Chart Why battery electric vehicles beat hydrogen electric vehicles without breaking a sweat www cleantechnica com CleanTechnica February 1 2021 Toyta s self charging hybrid ads deemed misleading banned in Norway www insideevs com InsideEVs January 27 2020 Don t fall for the self charging hybrid con Forbes October 24 2020 Toyota hybrid falls foul of ad rules after misleading cost saving claim www journal ie The Journal September 5 2019 Toyota s self charging hybrid ad is banned in Norway deemed a lie www electrek com Electrek January 24 2020 Toyota s self charging hybrid ad banned by this country www ibtimes com International Business Times January 24 2020 Plug in hybrid emissions 2 5 times higher than official tests indicate environmental groups claim www irishtimes com The Irish Times September 16 2020 The plug in hybrid con www transportenvironment com Transport Environment September 15 2020 Plug in hybrid cars burn more fuel than test record says Which The Guardian March 2 2021 Plug in hybrids in new emissions scandal as tests show higher pollution than claimed www transportenvironment org Transport amp Environment November 23 2020 Car companies are greenwashing their plug in hybrid vehicles www thenextweb com The Next Web May 31 2021 Ricardo study demonstrates importance of whole life vehicle CO2 emissions www ricardo com Ricardo June 7 2011 Unveiling the hybrid and self charging myth www irishevs com IrishEVs July 15 2020 Most Toyotas will still use gasoline in 2030 company says www wsj com Wall Street Journal May 12 2021 Toyota s greenwashing conceals worsening fleet MPG shows why they oppose MPG standards www electrek com Electrek October 31 2019 Toyota s greenwashing leads to record 180m fine for emissions lies www electrek com Electrek January 14 2021 Toyota to pay a record fine for a decade of clean air act violations The New York Times January 14 2021 Archived from the original on December 28 2021 Toyota to pay 180m for failing to report emissions defects www abnews com ABC News January 14 2021 Claims about environmental benefits of hybrid vehicles greenwashing www irishexaminer com Irish Examiner May 29 2021 Irish Examiner view Verification has huge role in climate wars www irishexaminer com Irish Examiner May 29 2021 We Need To Talk About Toyota www irishevs com IrishEVs May 25 2021 Toyota recalls electric cars over concerns about loose wheels BBC News June 24 2022 Retrieved June 24 2022 a b Overview Global website Toyota Motor Corporation March 31 2014 Archived from the original on February 13 2015 Retrieved February 6 2015 Jacob Vinod August 18 2006 In Toyota land The Hindu Business Line Archived from the original on July 21 2010 Retrieved May 9 2013 Greimel Hans May 6 2013 Dreary HQ city is a handicap in global glitz plan Automotive News Archived from the original on June 16 2013 Retrieved May 9 2013 a b Sales Production and Export Results Profile Company Toyota Motor Corporation Official Global Website Retrieved November 17 2020 Mazda and Toyota Establish Joint Venture Company Mazda Toyota Manufacturing U S A Inc Press release Mazda Retrieved November 26 2020 Is Toyota planning on introducing a diesel powered vehicle Toyota com Archived from the original on October 14 2013 Retrieved October 12 2013 Toyota s Woodstock plant opens 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Culture Behind TPS PDF University of Michigan p 36 Archived from the original PDF on September 15 2012 Retrieved March 25 2021 Spear Steven January 1999 The Toyota Production System An Example of Managing Complex Social Technical Systems Thesis US Harvard University Archived from the original on September 27 2019 Retrieved March 20 2020 ibidem p 11 ff ibidem p 25 ff How Toyota Became 1 Leadership Lessons from the World s Greatest Car Company Archived January 1 2016 at the Wayback Machine By David Magee Penguin Group 2007 How Toyota Became 1 Leadership Lessons from the World s Greatest Car Company Archived January 1 2016 at the Wayback Machine By David Magee Penguin Group 2007 Kaizen Event Implementation Manual Archived January 1 2016 at the Wayback Machine By Geoffrey L Mika 2006 a b Toyota Logo History Carlogos org April 30 2020 Retrieved August 6 2021 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link New brand for Toyota Queensland Transport News October 26 1989 page 11 Company gt Vision amp Philosophy gt Nov Dec 2004 Press release Japan Toyota Archived from the original on October 22 2009 Retrieved October 31 2009 Passion Press release Toyota Archived from the original on August 12 2011 Retrieved August 8 2011 Crown Motors Ltd Hong Kong Corporate Information in Chinese 2010 Archived from the original on February 17 2010 Retrieved March 19 2010 Toyota China Toyota com cn Archived from the original on August 13 2010 Retrieved September 11 2010 Toyota headquarters image cropped to show logo September 7 2012 retrieved August 6 2021 Kierstein Alex August 3 2021 Toyota Celebrates the Land Cruiser s 70 Year Run MotorTrend Retrieved August 6 2021 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link IANA Delegation Report for toyota Commercial Partners Cricket Australia www cricketaustralia com au Archived from the original on August 3 2017 Retrieved August 2 2017 Long Michael May 18 2015 English cricketers to drive Toyotas under new ECB deal SportsPro Retrieved August 2 2017 Toyota signs on as premier partner for three more years AFL com au afl com au August 31 2016 Archived from the original on August 3 2017 Retrieved August 2 2017 IOC Announces Toyota as TOP Partner to 2024 Olympic News Press release March 13 2015 Archived from the original on January 7 2017 Retrieved January 7 2017 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Toyota Official website Business data for Toyota Motor Corp SEC filings Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Toyota amp oldid 1137571061, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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