http://wardsauto.com/industry/nissan-we-can-match-bolt
Nissan: We Can Match Bolt
Jan 13, 2016  Christie Schweinsberg

[image  
http://wardsauto.com/site-files/wardsauto.com/files/imagecache/large_img/uploads/2016/01/2016nissanleaf02-1.jpg
Leaf range 107 miles
]

2016 North American International Auto Show

“We were very encouraged to see the Bolt – it means electrification is here
to stay,” says new Nissan U.S. product planning chief Michael Bunce.

DETROIT –General Motors Monday took the wraps off its new 200-mile-range
(322-km) electric Chevrolet Bolt.

You may think such a vehicle would strike fear into competitors with
lesser-range EVs, but a Nissan official says he’s happy to see the Bolt and
Nissan will eventually meet or exceed it.

“We will have offerings that will be comparable and at one point exceed the
competitors again,” Michael Bunce, Nissan North America’s newly installed
product planning chief, tells WardsAuto here during an interview at the 2016
North American International Auto Show.

Nissan was the first automaker in the U.S. to offer a pure EV, the Leaf, in
2010.

The ’16 Leaf’s range with a 30-kWh lithium-ion battery pack is 107 miles
(172 km).

Bunce notes when Nissan brought out the Leaf, it had to do much of the heavy
lifting itself.

“There was no mainstream battery supplier out there and we went internally
and developed our own fuel source, the battery,” he says.

Nissan partners with NEC of Japan for the Leaf’s Li-ions, but last year
Nissan CEO Carlos Ghosn praised LG Chem, supplier of the Bolt’s Li-ion pack,
as making the best batteries for automotive and said the automaker may
resource the Leaf's batteries to LG Chem.

Bunce notes there is an existing collaboration between Nissan and LG Chem on
certain elements of battery technology, indicating that resourcing business
to the Korean conglomerate wouldn't be a leap.

In light of the Bolt going on sale this year, could Nissan update the
battery technology in the Leaf before changing its body? Bunce indicates it
would be difficult to put a significantly longer-range battery in the
existing Leaf body.

“I think what you’ll see is both moving at the same pace,” he says, noting
aerodynamics play a crucial role in EV efficiency.

At last year's Tokyo motor show Nissan displayed a concept car, the IDS,
with a 60 kWh Li-ion pack. It attached no production date to the vehicle,
which also was a test bed for autonomous technology.

In general, more EV competition is good news in Bunce’s opinion.

“We were very encouraged to see the Bolt – it means electrification is here
to stay,” he says.

While Nissan has a hydrogen-fuel-cell program, unlike its Japanese
competitor Toyota it is not as keen on the technology and has announced no
production FCV.

Bunce notes electrical outlets are everywhere, but hydrogen-refueling
stations remain rare, with only a handful publicly accessible in Southern
and Northern California.
[© 2016 Penton]
...
http://www.examiner.com/article/nissan-not-afraid-of-gm-s-200-mile-range-chevy-bolt-electric-car
Nissan not afraid of GM's 200+ mile range Chevy Bolt electric car
January 13, 2016  “We will have offerings that will be comparable and at one
point exceed the competitors again,” ...




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