Bangkok Post

Nissan unveils Ariya, all-electric SUV

- SHIHO TAKEZAWA MASATSUGU HORIE TSUYOSHI INAJIMA

Nissan Motor Co yesterday unveiled a new electric vehicle and redesign of its “hamburger” corporate logo, seeking to make a fresh start after months of management turmoil and declining profitabil­ity.

The Ariya, an all-electric SUV with a range of as much as 610 kilometres, is the first entirely new product to be launched under new management that took over in December.

The debut of the model, which has a starting price of about five million yen ($46,600), is the automaker’s latest effort to refresh an ageing line-up.

“Ariya has all the essence of Nissan’s technology,” said Makoto Uchida, Nissan’s chief executive officer.

Nissan could benefit from the buzz surroundin­g a new vehicle, even though it isn’t scheduled to go on sale until mid-2021.

The Japanese automaker had its biggest loss in two decades for the year that ended in March, and the November 2018 arrest of former leader Carlos Ghosn triggered management turmoil that lingers to this day.

The Ariya serves as a reminder that Nissan is still Japan’s second-biggest automaker by output, and that it has been working for years in preparatio­n for the EV and autonomous driving era.

“Expectatio­ns are high,” said Koji Endo, an analyst at SBI Securities. “Whether this will sell is going to have a large effect on Nissan’s performanc­e.”

The Ariya is a successor to the allelectri­c Leaf, which went on sale a decade ago in Japan and the United States. Refreshed once in 2017, the five-door hatchback is one of the

best-selling EVs in the world, with about 500,000 shipped so far. One drawback of the Leaf, however, has been its limited range of about 322 kilometres.

With a length of 4.6 metres and height of 1.6 metres, the Ariya fits squarely within the compact SUV category. The interior space, however, is comparable to that of a larger vehicle, thanks to the placement of batteries at the floor of the chassis, like in Tesla Inc’s models.

The Ariya comes with ProPilot 2.0, the latest version of Nissan’s autonomous driving technology. The feature, which was rolled out last year for the refreshed Skyline, offers lanechangi­ng and driver-monitoring capabiliti­es.

The SUV also has a self-parking feature, and Amazon.com Inc’s voicebased digital assistant Alexa.

The big question is whether consumers will be ready to buy the Ariya when it goes on sale in Japan mid2021, and whether Nissan can get its business back on surer footing by then.

For the coming fiscal year through March, analysts project, on average, a loss of 323 billion yen and a 17% decline in sales.

“This car is extremely important for Nissan,” senior vice president Ivan Espinosa said in an interview. “It is the first car in a complete shift in our lineup and the way we want to address the market moving forward.”

Nissan is also using the Ariya’s debut to show off a new corporate brand logo, to be used on vehicles and official communicat­ion. It’s a simplified version of the prior design, with just two half-circles depicting the sun, fronted by the letters of the company’s name.

 ?? BLOOMBERG ?? The Ariya, an all-electric SUV with a range of as much as 610 kilometres, is the first entirely new product to be launched under new management that took over in December.
BLOOMBERG The Ariya, an all-electric SUV with a range of as much as 610 kilometres, is the first entirely new product to be launched under new management that took over in December.
 ??  ?? Nissan Motor Co’s new corporate brand logo is a simplified version of the prior design, with just two half-circles depicting the sun, fronted by the letters of the company’s name.
Nissan Motor Co’s new corporate brand logo is a simplified version of the prior design, with just two half-circles depicting the sun, fronted by the letters of the company’s name.

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