UK: Nissan advances EV partnership with development agency

Author: | 18 December 2009

Regional Development Agency One North East and Nissan Motor have entered the next phase of their partnership on the development of zero emission mobility in north east England, home to the automaker's Sunderland plant.
 
The two parties have signed a definitive agreement which sets out a road map for the roll-out of electric vehicles and infrastructure and cements the region's status as the national centre for the development of ultra low carbon vehicles.

The agreement also contains firm commitments on incentives for drivers and education and demonstration initiatives that will be introduced throughout 2010 and 2011.

Under the agreement, One North East will install at least 619 publicly available, 'future-proof' charging points by 1 January, 2011, which will support both 3kW and 7kW charges and will also include 12 50kW 'rapid-charging' stations.

Electricity at the 619 charging points will be provided free of charge until 31 March, 2012, or until an itemised billing system becomes available. As part of the agreement, One North East has already installed two charging points for public use within its own head office car park at Newburn Riverside in Newcastle.

Nissan has agreed to work in partnership with One North East to supply Leaf electric vehicles to the region in early 2011 and to place priority on requests for electric vehicles in the UK from north east England.

The Sunderland car factory will also produce batteries for electric vehicles in the future.

One North East will now work with regional partners on developing incentives for people driving electric vehicles that include introducing at least 200 free of charge, dedicated public parking places by November 2010, and introducing preferential access to identified road lanes and city areas. The agency is also working with developers to have charging points installed in newly constructed buildings which feature parking spaces.

The agreement also includes One North East's commitment to a GBP2.4m investment in the National Centre for Sustainable Manufacturing and a GBP2.3m investment in the Ultra Low Carbon Vehicle Development Centre.

Sectors: Electric drive, Vehicle manufacturers

Companies: Nissan

View next/previous articles

Currently reading -

UK: Nissan advances EV partnership with development agency

There are currently no comments on this article

Be the first to comment on this article

Related sector research

Global market review of electric vehicles - forecasts to 2018

This greatly expanded latest version of the popular just-auto report provides a comprehensive overview of the global electric vehicles sector, major manufacturers, technology trends and market forecas...

Read more about electric vehicles

Related company research

Nissan Motor Co., Ltd.

Datamonitor's Nissan Motor Co., Ltd. - SWOT Analysis company profile is the essential source for top-level company data and information. Nissan Motor Co., Ltd. - SWOT Analysis examines the company’s key business structure and operations, history and ...

Related articles

THE WEEK THAT WAS: GM in the frame

Nein. That little word, or more likely a longer-winded variant, was not what GM Europe supremo Nick Reilly needed to hear from Germany's coalition federal government over the little matter of backstopping a EUR1.3bn loan with taxpayers' money.

JAPAN: Nissan makes Leaf noisier at low speed

Nissan is unveiling the new 'noise' it has created for its Leaf electric car. It has invited nearly 500 people to drive its new EV at the company's Oppama test track in Japan over the next week.

UK: Companies wary of fleet EVs

Company chiefs in the UK say they would be reluctant to invest in electric vehicles for their fleets because of uncertainties over long term costs, according to a survey by Lex Autolease, the country's largest provider of company cars.

Welcome to the home of automotive information, insight & intelligence

Not a member? Join here

Decrease font sizeDecrease font sizeDecrease font size Increase font sizeIncrease font sizeIncrease font size Comment on this article Email this to a friend Print this page