Nissan Bets On UK 'Renaissance' With Battery Plant And New Vehicle

Nissan Motor Co bet on Britain to supercharge its European electric future on Thursday, pledging $1.4 billion with its Chinese partner to build a giant battery plant that will power 100,000 vehicles a year including a new crossover model.
Facing the most profound technological shift in a century, the titans of the auto industry are racing to secure battery supply close to the factories where they will make the new cleaner electric vehicles of the future.
Nissan cast its backing for the 9 gigawatt-hour (GWh) plant as illustrative of a rejuvenation of Britain's automotive industry, which has for five years grappled with the fear that Brexit could cut off the rest of the European market.
"This project is the demonstration of the renaissance of the British car industry," Ashwani Gupta, Nissan's chief operating officer, told reporters at the Sunderland plant, which exports 70% of its vehicles to the European Union.
British Prime Minister Boris Johnson said Nissan's move was "a major vote of confidence in the UK and our highly skilled workers in the North East". Nissan said Britain had backed the plan, but did not detail any guarantees or incentives.

Nissan will spend up to 423 million pounds to produce a new-generation all-electric crossover vehicle at the plant, where it already produces the LEAF electric vehicle and the Qashqai crossover SUV.
The 1 billion-pound ($1.4 billion) investment by Nissan, its Chinese partner Envision AESC and local government in northeast England will create 6,200 jobs at the Sunderland plant and in British supply chains.
Nissan will spend up to 423 million pounds to produce a new-generation all-electric crossover vehicle at the plant, where it already produces the LEAF electric vehicle and the Qashqai crossover SUV. The new vehicle has yet to be named and there is no launch date.
ELECTRIC FUTURE
As world powers try to slash carbon emissions by scrapping the fossil-fuel guzzling internal combustion engine, Britain has pledged to ban the sale of new diesel and petrol cars from 2030.
Going electric, though, is hard.
China dominates the production of electric vehicle batteries and the processing of the minerals used to make them, though the United States and Europe are trying to catch up.
Western leaders, including Johnson, are loath to sacrifice hundreds of thousands of automotive jobs - often in politically sensitive constituencies - by importing batteries from China, rather than manufacturing domestically.
And unless Britain can build both battery production and supply chains, it risks losing its four-decade reputation as the investor-friendly gateway for top companies seeking to export to the rest of Europe.
Envision could invest an additional 1.8 billion pounds in the battery plant to expand generating capacity to up to 25GWh and create 4,500 new jobs in the region by 2030. There is potential on site for up to 35GWh.
"We also want to build the supply ecosystem in the country - but you do need critical mass," Zhang Lei, Envision Group founder and chief executive, told Reuters.
Zhang said the battery plant could supply other manufacturers and hoped that, once it expanded capacity, it would be able to export, including to Europe.
Still, Britain is far short of the installed battery capacity it will need to power electric cars in the long term and there are risks the technology will be superseded.
"Battery development and production is currently in a complete state of flux - chaos even," said Bob Hancké, associate professor of political economy at the London School of Economics. "Any investment now runs the risk of closing of technologically more advanced options a few years from now."
Nissan said the new crossover, to be built on the Alliance CMF-EV platform shared by partners Renault and Mitsubishi, would be exported to European markets.

Envision could invest an additional 1.8 billion pounds in the battery plant to expand generating capacity to up to 25GWh
BREXIT
Japan's capital has used Britain as a gateway to Europe since the early 1980s, when then Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher persuaded Nissan to build a plant in Sunderland on an old airfield.
Japanese investors worried the Brexit vote - which was particularly strong in Sunderland - would scupper their bets.
A new trade deal agreed with the EU last year allows the free trade of cars but with a dangerous twist about rules of origin - at least 40% of the value of a car has to be produced in the United Kingdom or EU to be sold in the bloc.
That requirement rises to 55% from 2027 - a crucial detail that would mean an imported battery, which can make up half the vehicle's sale price, would close off the European market to British-based car factories.
The new model takes Nissan's total capital investment in the Sunderland plant past 5 billion pounds.
"This is not one shot, this is not one car, this is the plan and this is for 10 years' engagement," Guillaume Cartier, Nissan chairman for Africa, Middle East, India, Europe & Oceania, told Reuters.
Latest News
car&bike Team | Mar 23, 2026Triumph 350cc Motorcycles Set To Launch On April 6-7Triumph Motorcycles will launch its new sub-350cc motorcycles in India on April 6-7, in order to comply with the lower GST rates.1 min read
Carandbike Team | Mar 23, 2026Mahindra, HPCL Partner To Expand EV Charging Network Pan-IndiaUnder the partnership, Mahindra will set up its Charge-iN EV network at HPCL fuel stations across the country.1 min read
Jaiveer Mehra | Mar 23, 20262026 Skoda Kushaq Facelift Variant-Wise Prices, Features DetailedThe facelifted Kushaq is offered across 5 trim levels and retains the 1.0 TSI and 1.5 TSI engine options from the outgoing model.1 min read
Jaiveer Mehra | Mar 22, 20262026 Xiaomi SU7 Debuts With More Tech, 900+ Km RangeXiaomi has made notable updates to the SU7 under the skin, ranging from standardising features across the range to introducing all-new features.1 min read
Jaiveer Mehra | Mar 21, 2026New Tata Harrier EV Fearless+ QWD Launched At Rs 26.49 LakhNew dual-motor all-wheel-drive variant is priced about Rs 2.5 lakh less than the full-loaded Harrier EV Empowered QWD.2 mins read
Jaiveer Mehra | Mar 21, 2026Skoda Kushaq Facelift Launched At Rs 10.69 LakhThe Kushaq packs in new features and, more importantly, a new 8-speed automatic gearbox for the 1.0 TSI engine.1 min read
Bilal Firfiray | Mar 24, 2026Nissan Gravite Review: Sub-Rs 10 Lakh Seven-Seater That’s PracticalNissan has introduced the Gravite as a practical seven-seater that’s affordable, that’s easy to live with, and value for money. But should you buy it?1 min read
Janak Sorap | Mar 23, 2026Ducati Desmo450 MX Review: No Road, Only DirtDucati’s first-ever motocross motorcycle promises extreme performance, advanced technology and race-focused engineering, and we got a chance to experience it at BigRock Dirt Park to see what it’s really like.7 mins read
Seshan Vijayraghvan | Mar 21, 20262026 Renault Duster Review: The Hero Returns, But Does He Deliver?2026 Renault Duster - new design, new platform, modern tech, and most notably, the segment’s most powerful turbo-petrol engine.8 mins read
Carandbike Team | Mar 20, 2026Skoda Kushaq Facelift Review: Sharper, Smarter, Still The Driver’s SUV?Skoda Kushaq facelift comes with updated design, newer features on the inside, and a new 8-speed automatic gearbox. But does it still stand out as the driver’s SUV in its segment?5 mins read
Seshan Vijayraghvan | Mar 10, 20262026 Mercedes-Benz CLA Electric Review: It’s Properly Good!The CLA moniker has returned but in an electric avatar. As impressive as it is, can this baby EQS become a success story?9 mins read
















































































































