Environment & Energy
Related: About this forumDead End? March LEAF Electric Car Sales Increase by 286.2%
"March 2013, was a record month for sales of Nissan cars and trucks in North America with 137,726 units sold, 2,236 of them LEAF all-electric cars.
What a difference a year can make.
In March 2012, Nissan dealerships in North America sold only 579 LEAF electric cars. This year that number jumped to 2,236 units, an increase of 286.2% calendar year-to-date (CYTD). The increase in sales is the best of the entire Nissan product line. The month also marketed the first full month of LEAF production at the Smyrna, Tennessee plant."
http://www.evworld.com/news.cfm?newsid=29939
A movement listed elsewhere in today's news as a dead end. If so, we could use a few more of them.
OKIsItJustMe
(19,938 posts)In a record sales month for Nissan in general, one of their models (the LEAF) also had record sales, amounting to: 1.6% of vehicles sold.
http://www.plugincars.com/ghosn-defends-nissan-leaf-calling-electric-cars-future-automobile-126844.html
By David Herron · April 01, 2013
[font size=3]In some quarters, Nissan CEO Carlos Ghosn has some explaining to do for staking the company's future on the all-electric LEAF. While the LEAF just had its best sales month ever, with more than 2,200 units sold in March 2013, it will take several months of similar numbers to overcome the sting of low sales in 2012. Speaking at the New York International Auto Show (NYIAS) over the weekend, Ghosn defended the choice to embrace electrification, saying that Nissan can afford the long-term investment, and that Nissan intends to make a major move into China with the LEAF technology.
Ghosn described the LEAF as "an asset for the brand." He believes the EV projects an eco-friendly and tech-savvy image of the company. It shows that Nissan "dares going into places and tackling products that nobody has tackled before," he said. Ghosn's rhetoric is persuasive, but this question lingers: Does a company spend 4 billion euros developing a product just to convey a green image?
[font size=4]One Step at a Time[/font]
For Ghosn, the LEAF is more than expensive greenwashing. It's a long term investment in the future of the automobile. With manufacturing now localized to North America and England, Nissan is now ready to, as Ghosn put it, "transform the LEAF from a technological feat to a sales performance." With the LEAF, Nissan has "a great car, a great technology but the main challenge now is to sell."
But, according to Ghosn, the LEAF is still too expensive. The next step for Nissan was to "localize" production of the LEAF to North America and Europe. That move is part of a broader strategy to move production out of Japan, to the same continent where cars are sold. The reason behind this is monetary exchange rates, and the value of the Yen. The current exchange rates are expensive for Nissan, and moving LEAF production to the U.S. is what enabled Nissan to lower the entry-level price of the LEAF.
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http://www.digitaltrends.com/cars/heads-roll-at-nissan-as-leaf-sales-fail-to-reach-half-the-projected-goals/
By Nick Jaynes March 12, 2013
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Although Nissan has just passed the 50,000 mark for LEAF sales, its a far cry from the initial expectations. The Japanese automaker hoped to sell twice that number in the same amount of time.
Only selling 9,819 LEAFs in 2011, Nissan still aimed to sell 20,000 for 2012. It fell just shy of half that goal in spite having slashed prices and increased the LEAFs driving range.
In light of these less-than-spectacular sales figures, Nissan has moved the corporate vice president of electric cars, Hideaki Watanabe, to senior vice president of Nissan parts supplier Calsonic Kansei and replaced him with former Nissan chief operating officer Toshiyuki Shiga.
Chief Operating Officer Shiga is taking direct responsibility of zero emission efforts because the business is Nissans top priority which requires global and cross-functional efforts, Chris Keeffe, a spokesman for the carmaker said speaking to Bloomberg.
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wtmusic
(39,166 posts)A 286% jump in sales kicks ass. No caveats.
Just admit it - you were wrong about battery electric cars. What's the big deal?
OKIsItJustMe
(19,938 posts)When sales are horrible, increasing all the way to lousy makes a record month.
wtmusic
(39,166 posts)let's see you turn that frown upside down.
OKIsItJustMe
(19,938 posts)wtmusic
(39,166 posts)Hey because you're in kind of a bad mood, I got a present for you...should make your job easier. You're welcome.
OKIsItJustMe
(19,938 posts)I get:
Average sales figures for October-December of 2012: 1535.67
Average sales figures for January-March of 2013: 1179.67
It just doesnt look like a sustained growth to me. It looks like they had 2 really slow sales months, followed by a decent one, which failed to make up the difference.
Of course, now that theyre making them in the US, sales may increase. That would be fine by me.
http://www.detroitnews.com/article/20130327/AUTO0104/303270426
In January, Nissan dropped the price of its new base-model 2013 Leaf EV by 18 percent to $28,800, and last year offered incentives in the wake of far lower than expected sales.
Renault-Nissan chief executive Carlos Ghosn said the company isn't backing away from its aggressive electric vehicle sales target for 2020.
"We are just going to have to be extremely patient and resilient and remove the obstacles," Ghosn told reporters on the sidelines of the New York International Auto Show on Wednesday. "We are reducing the price and will continue to reduce the price in function of the reduction of the cost."
The Leaf's sales have struggled and the automaker failed to double sales in 2012 as it had predicted. Instead, Nissan sold about the same number as in 2011. Last year, Nissan sold 9,819 Leaf EVs in the U.S., up 1.5 percent over 2011.
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http://www.democraticunderground.com/112726558