The Philippine Star

Nissan to create electric vehicle ecosystem

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YOKOHAMA, Japan – Nissan has created a vision to make electric vehicles even more useful to customers by introducin­g new convenient ways to utilize their batteries’ ability to store and share energy.

Under the plan, called Nissan Energy, owners of Nissan’s electric vehicles (EV’s) will be able to easily connect their cars with energy systems to charge their batteries, power homes and businesses or feed energy back to power grids. The company will also develop new ways to reuse electric car batteries.

Nissan has already begun programs in the U.S., Japan and Europe aimed at creating an “ecosystem” around its range of EV’s, including the Nissan LEAF, the world’s bestsellin­g electric car. Nissan Energy brings these initiative­s together as part of the company’s Nissan Intelligen­t Mobility strategy.

“Nissan Energy will enable our customers to use their electric cars for much more than just driving – now they can be used in nearly every aspect of the customer’s lives,” said executive vice president Daniele Schillaci, Nissan’s global head of marketing, sales and electric vehicles. “Our Nissan Intelligen­t Mobility vision calls for changing how cars are integrated with society, and Nissan Energy turns that vision into reality.”

Nissan Energy will establish new standards for connecting vehicles to energy systems through three key initiative­s: Nissan Energy Supply, Nissan Energy Share and Nissan Energy Storage.

High-profile Nissan Energy initiative­s extend to a variety of locations:

• US: Nissan North America will be piloting the use of LEAF vehicles to assist in powering its headquarte­rs facilities during peak electrical demand times, anticipati­ng significan­t cost savings

• Germany: LEAF vehicles will be used as a reserve for the German electricit­y grid, in an innovative pilot project involving Nissan, technology company The Mobility House, energy supplier ENERVIE and transmissi­on system operator Amprion

• Japan: Nissan is working with partners such as electric and telecom companies, conducting field tests of vehicle-to-grid and virtual power plant systems to confirm and promote opportunit­ies for electric vehicles to assist with managing energy

NISSAN ENERGY SUPPLY: PROVIDING THE CONNECTED CHARGING SOLUTIONS CUSTOMERS NEED AT HOME, ON THE ROAD, AND AT THEIR DESTINATIO­N

Customers want to charge their EV’s when it’s most convenient, and the majority of charging takes place at home. Nissan’s efforts to assist customers includes verifying whether charging equipment, such as electrical sockets or wall boxes, can be connected to Nissan electric vehicles safely.

Away from home, customers can make use of the fast-growing CHAdeMO charging network – one of the world’s largest, with more than 22,000 quick-charging points globally.

Finding charging locations and hooking into the network – allowing Nissan Energy Supply to come alive – is made possible through the revised LEAF navigation system and easily available NissanConn­ect app.

NISSAN ENERGY SHARE: WORKING WITH PARTNERS TO HARNESS ENERGY INTEGRATIO­N POTENTIAL

The batteries in an electric car can do more than just power the vehicle; they can also serve as mobile energy storage devices. Nissan vehicles already on the road contain more than 10 GWh of combined storage potential.

Nissan Energy Share capabiliti­es connect the vehicles with society’s infrastruc­ture to allow them to share their high-capacity battery power with a connected home or building. They also allow the cars to link to the local energy grid to act as virtual power plants – supplying the vehicle’s power to the grid and contributi­ng to efficient energy management. Thanks to these capabiliti­es, customers will be able to share spare battery capacity without compromisi­ng their mobility.

NISSAN ENERGY STORAGE: PROVIDING A “SECOND LIFE” TO AN ELECTRIC VEHICLE’S BATTERY

The life of a Nissan electric vehicle’s battery isn’t over after it has finished powering the car. The battery can be recycled and refurbishe­d for a number of different uses – from powering electric forklifts and generators to supplying energy to a sports arena. As more and more customers switch to electric cars, the availabili­ty of used lithium-ion batteries is expected to increase significan­tly as owners replace their vehicles.

“Nissan now offers customers a true EV ecosystem with Nissan Energy,” said Schillaci. “This is what we feel is the ‘new standard for electrific­ation’ – it’s not just about owning a vehicle but taking advantage of all the associated benefits, for the customer and society overall.”

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