The Guardian (USA)

Nissan, Renault and Mitsubishi pledge new start

- Reuters

Nissan, Renault and Mitsubishi­have pledged a “new start” for the world’s top carmaking alliance, breaking up the all-powerful chairmansh­ip previously occupied by ousted boss Carlos Ghosn in a move designed to put the three motor companies on a more equal footing.

The arrest and removal of Ghosn, who is credited for rescuing Nissan from near-bankruptcy in 1999, had left the future of the alliance uncertain with speculatio­n the partnershi­p could unravel. Nissan said Ghosn wielded too much power, creating a lack of oversight and corporate governance.

Ghosn was released on $9m (£6.8m) bail last week after spending more than 100 days in a Tokyo detention centre. He faces charges of under-reporting his salary at the Japanese carmaker by about $82m over nearly a decade – charges he has called “meritless”.

The three companies said JeanDomini­que Senard, the chairman of Renault, would serve as the head of the alliance but – in a critical sign of the rebalancin­g – he will not be chairman of Nissan. It is unclear who will take that job, which has been vacant since November, when Ghosn was first arrested.

“We are fostering a new start of the alliance,” Senard said at a news conference.

“Our future lies in the efficiency of this alliance,” he said after a board meeting at Nissan’s headquarte­rs in Yokohama.

Senard said he would not seek to be chairman of Nissan, but believed he was a “natural candidate” to be vicechairm­an.

Ghosn, who has not spoken to media since his release, put in a request with a Tokyo court on Monday to attend Nissan’s board meeting, but he was refused permission.

Under the terms of his bail – which include giving up his three passports and having no smartphone access to the internet – he needed the court’s approval to attend.

In the wake of the scandal, Renault has started its own review of payments to Ghosn. French media have also reported that prosecutor­s have opened a preliminar­y inquiry into how he financed his 2016 wedding at the Château de Versailles.

His dramatic arrest and lengthy detention exposed tensions between Nissan and its leading shareholde­r, Renault, complicati­ng the outlook for a partnershi­p that is the world’s largest maker of automobile­s, excluding heavy trucks.

Some at Nissan had been unhappy with Ghosn’s push for a deeper tie-up with Renault, which was seen as possibly including a full merger. Renault, which is smaller than Nissan, bought 43% of the Japanese giant before the 1999 rescue.

Nissan holds a 15% non-voting stake in Renault, , whose biggest shareholde­r is the French government.

 ??  ?? The leaders of the Alliance Renault-Nissan-Mitsubishi hold a joint press conference after Carlos Ghosn, former chairman of Nissan, was released on bail. Photograph: Anadolu Agency/Getty Images
The leaders of the Alliance Renault-Nissan-Mitsubishi hold a joint press conference after Carlos Ghosn, former chairman of Nissan, was released on bail. Photograph: Anadolu Agency/Getty Images

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