Japanese carmaker Nissan said on Friday it will delay the planned summer launch of its flagship new electric Ariya model to this winter over the global chip shortage plaguing carmakers.
Announced in July 2020, the new 100 per cent electric model was initially supposed to go on sale in Japan from mid-2021, before arriving in Europe, North America and China by the end of the year. But in a press release on Friday, Nissan said customers in Japan could now order the limited-edition B6 model for “this winter”, with no set date for those in other markets.
A Nissan spokeswoman confirmed that the semiconductor shortage affecting carmakers around the world was hampering the rollout. “We have been facing various industry challenges, including semiconductor shortage, and our priority is to ensure that we deliver the highly advanced all-new model... to customers with the highest level of quality and care,” she told AFP. “And to make sure that those things are done, we have delayed the sales in our area.”
The model is particularly important for Nissan, which sees it as key to opening a “new chapter” for the firm, according to its director general Makoto Uchida.
Ariya will be the troubled carmaker’s first 100 per cent electric vehicle targeting the general car market since the Leaf debuted a decade ago.
Nissan was struggling even before the pandemic, and was rocked by the arrest and subsequent escape of its former chief Carlos Ghosn, currently a fugitive in Lebanon.
But the coronavirus crisis only deepened its woes, pushing it deeper into the red. Last month it trimmed its annual net loss, but warned its outlook remained clouded by the chip shortage.
The coronavirus crisis only deepened [Nissan]’s woes, pushing it deeper into the red. Last month it trimmed its annual net loss, but warned its outlook remained clouded by the chip shortage
Semiconductors are in short supply, thanks in part to increased demand due to a surge in home electronics purchases during the pandemic. The industry has also been hit by several production setbacks, including a fire at a producer in Japan.