Tuesday, June 9

Carlos Ghosn, former boss of Nissan and the Renault-Nissan-Mitsubishi Alliance, agrees that the Japanese automaker has been too slow in producing electric cars.

According to Ghosn, the speed in the transition to electrification will determine who will win the race among global automakers.

See also: Nissan become carbon neutral by 2050

Carlos Ghosn is now in legal trouble with allegations of financial misconduct during his tenure at Nissan.

He called China playing beautifully with electrification.

“New entrants like Tesla and manufacturers from China are in a better position than the old manufacturers. Established manufacturers must accelerate electrification to remain competitive,” he said in an interview, Wednesday, December 15, 2021.

Carlos Ghosn played a key role behind the production of the Nissan Leaf EV in December 2010. He stated that when the car hit the market, the auto industry laughed at Nissan. After a decade, all automakers are racing to make electric cars.

“Frankly, for ICE cars, there will be no tomorrow,” said Ghosn.

Nissan a few months ago announced an electric car production program worth USD 18 billion. This strategy covers the production of 50 percent of electric cars from Nissan’s total product by the end of March 2031.

See also: Nissan Reveals 4 New Electric Vehicles Concept

Carlos Ghosn considers Nissan’s electrification strategy too slow. In fact, he called Nissan visionless in this new era.

“They don’t know where they’re going. They don’t have an idea of ​​this big technological transformation that’s happening,” said Carlos Ghosn of the future of Nissan and electric cars.

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James Bryant is an EV journalist at EVMagz.com, covering global developments in electric vehicle technology, battery innovation, charging infrastructure, and clean mobility policy across major markets. He holds a degree in Journalism and Digital Media and, outside of work, enjoys early-morning swimming, building custom mechanical keyboards, and exploring independent electric motorcycle projects.

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