http://www.businessweek.com/news/2013-08-29/nissan-joins-tesla-in-selling-green-car-credits-to-boost-revenue
Nissan Joins Tesla in Selling Green-Car Credits to Boost Revenue
By Alan Ohnsman  August 29, 2013

Nissan Motor Co., the most prolific electric-car maker, has begun selling
green-car credits under California’s clean-air rules. The only automaker
that had previously disclosed doing so is Tesla Motors Inc. 

California requires large automakers to sell electric or other zero-emission
vehicles in proportion to their share of the largest U.S. state market for
cars and trucks. Nissan has delivered enough of its all-electric Leaf
hatchbacks that it has started selling excess credits, Executive Vice
President Andy Palmer told reporters in Irvine, California, this week. 

“We’ve got carbon credits to sell, and we’re selling them -- California ZEV
credits,” Palmer said. He didn’t elaborate, and the Yokohama, Japan-based
company declined to provide details about timing, price or purchasers. 

U.S. demand for plug-in hybrid and battery-only autos has been pushed by
California’s requirement for such vehicles to ease emissions of
climate-warming carbon dioxide and other exhaust gases and by federal rules
aimed at doubling fuel-efficiency by 2025. The state’s target is to get 1.5
million zero-emission vehicles on the road by 2025. 

Tesla, too small to be required to accrue the ZEV credits under California’s
pollution rules, has so far been the main seller. Its first net income was
made possible in part by such transactions to undisclosed mass-market
rivals. In the first half the Palo Alto, California-based company got $119
million, or 12 percent of its revenue, from ZEV credit sales. 

Including sales of credits for exceeding federal efficiency requirements,
such transactions accounted for 16 percent of Tesla’s total revenue. 

Credit Counts 

“As far as pure electric sales volumes go, it’s really only a two-horse race
at this point,” between Tesla’s Model S and Nissan’s Leaf, said Ed Kim, an
analyst at researcher AutoPacific Inc. “As with Tesla, this isn’t revenue
they can count on for a long time, but they can take advantage of it while
it is there.” 

Tesla’s Model S, priced from $70,000 to more than $100,000, generates as
many as seven ZEV credits, the maximum issued by California, because of its
range of as much as 300 miles (483 kilometers) per charge and ability to be
rapidly “refueled” by swapping its battery pack with a charged one. 

Chief Executive Officer Elon Musk said the company will open its first such
facilities by year-end. Musk has also said its ZEV credit sales will drop in
the third and fourth quarters. 

Each Leaf sold in the main U.S. electric-car markets, including other states
that participate in the California program, earns three credits from the
state’s Air Resources Board, which manages it. 

Regulators don’t set prices for ZEV credits and the sales are negotiated
directly between companies, said Dave Clegern, a spokesman for the
Sacramento-based agency. 

Leaf Sales 

Nissan declined to elaborate on its credit sales. 

“While Nissan has been approached by other automakers regarding
emission-credit transactions, these discussions and the outcome of any
transactions is held in strict confidence by all involved parties,” said
David Reuter, a spokesman for the carmaker. 

Nissan has sold 75,000 Leafs globally since late 2010, and California is
among the car’s biggest markets, Palmer said. The Leaf, priced from about
$30,000, travels as far as 100 miles per charge. CEO Carlos Ghosn has said
electric vehicles will account for as much as 10 percent of the global
market by 2020. 

Buyers of the Leaf or Model S receive $7,500 in U.S. tax credits -- separate
from the credits traded among the companies -- and clean-vehicle rebates of
$2,500 in California. 

Sales Surge 

Nissan sold 11,703 Leafs in the U.S. this year through July, more than
triple a year earlier, and should deliver 20,000 or more for all of 2013,
Jose Munoz, the carmaker’s head of sales for the Americas, said in an
interview this week. That would be more than double the 9,819 it sold in all
of last year. 

“In the first six months of this year we’ve sold as many as we sold last
year,” Munoz said in Irvine. “Some months from now, I’d like to sit down
with you and confirm that we didn’t do 20,000 but significantly more,” he
said, without elaborating. 

Supply of the car, now built for the U.S. at Nissan’s Smyrna, Tennessee,
plant after being imported from Japan, is set to expand, Munoz said. 

“To be honest, we have been limited by our production constraints,” he said.
“Recently we have agreed to increase production this year so that we can
increase our sales.”
[©2013 Bloomberg]




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