Botswana Guardian

Toyota accelerate­s electric vehicle plans

-

Toyota Motors wants the world to know it’s serious about competing in the market for battery- based electric vehicles ( EV). The world’s biggest carmaker is planning to invest ¥ 4- trillion ($ 35.2bn) to supercharg­e its EV push, with a target to sell 3.5- million units annually by the end of the decade, CEO Akio Toyoda said at a briefing on Tuesday. Toyota will roll out 30 electric models by 2030, a step up from a prior plan to introduce 15 EVs globally by 2025.

The new targets show Toyota intends to compete seriously with Tesla Inc., Volkswagen AG and other global rivals as the car industry shifts away from combustion engines and into a new era of greener automobile­s. The announceme­nt also reflects a more aggressive push into the electric arena by Toyota, which has for years questioned whether the world - outside parts of the US and Europe - is truly ready for EVs.

Toyota will also pour another ¥ 4- trillion into hybrid and fuel- cell car investment­s, bringing the total amount dedicated to electrific­ation efforts to ¥ 8- trillion.

That compares with a recent announceme­nt by Nissan Motor to invest ¥ 2- trillion in developing EVs and a commitment by VW to invest about € 52bn in the developmen­t and production of new electric vehicles, the industry’s biggest push.

“Instead of predicting the future, we want to be ready for any change,” Toyoda said. “Until the path ahead is clear, we want to provide our customers with a range of options.”

Asked why Toyota decided to upgrade its targets, Toyoda said that new energy policies announced by nations at the COP26 summit earlier this year prompted the carmaker to update its targets.

“As policies became clear, we thought about our own policies and came up with this new figure,” Toyoda said. Toyota’s been slower to release mass- market electric cars compared with European peers, choosing to invest in a wide range of emissionre­ducing vehicles from hybrids to hydrogen- powered cars.

Toyota is betting that EVs are a good fit for countries with high incomes and built- out charging infrastruc­ture as well as the ability to make and charge batteries with electricit­y derived from renewable sources, Toyota vice- chair Shigeru Hayakawa said in an interview last month. For regions that don’t fit those conditions, hybrids will play a crucial role in decarbonis­ing transporta­tion over the coming decades, he said.

For its Lexus brand of luxury cars, Toyota plans to make the line- up fully electric across the globe by 2035, Toyoda said.

Earlier this year, Toyota said its goal was to sell 8- million electrifie­d vehicles in 2030, including 2- million fuel- cell cars and BEVs, with the rest consisting of hybrid vehicles. That’s out of the roughly 10- million vehicles it currently sells each year. More recently though, Toyota’s stepped up its EV push. That comes as a number of countries implement stricter emissions regulation­s and move to allocate more money for EV purchase incentives and charging stations. Earlier in December, Toyota said it would be ready to sell only zero- emission cars in Europe by 2035 to align itself with the region’s ambitious climate plan. The following week, Toyota said it will invest $ 1.29bn in an automotive battery manufactur­ing facility in North Carolina, part of larger plans to spend ¥ 1.5- trillion on battery production and research over the next decade. “Not being 100percent EV doesn’t mean we don’t have aspiration­s,” Toyoda said of the carmaker’s decision to offer a wide range of electrifie­d models. “Our actions over the next 5 years will change our future. We are leaving as many options as possible.”

 ?? ?? Akio Toyoda speaks during a news conference on Dec. 14 PIC- www. bloomberg. com
Akio Toyoda speaks during a news conference on Dec. 14 PIC- www. bloomberg. com

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Botswana