Nissan knee deep in the electrictrification race
Nissan CEO Carlos Ghosn has held to his belief that hybrids are not the
answer to the fuel efficiency question. The Japanese automaker came out
with a very capable Altima hybrid
last year, but it was Toyota technology purchased to help Nissan look
good in the short term. Nissan has been betting most of its R&D
dollars on electric vehicles, and the fruit of its engineering labors
will be first seen stateside in 2010.
It's important to note that Nissan intends to launch the technology
here in the States, which is significant because Japanese automakers
typically launch new technology in their home market first before U.S.
customers ever see it.
Nissan hasn't revealed much about the
vehicle besides a 2010 release date, but we do know that the automaker
is working to install charging stations in many urban parking garages
and railway stations in the U.S. A robust EV charging infrastructure
will quell critics' worries that electric vehicles' limited range will
prevent the technology from becoming a mainstream answer for gasoline
power. It'll be interesting to see if Nissan can surprise the
car-buying public with a game-breaking EV before GM and Toyota can
deliver the Volt and plug-in Prius.
via autoblog

