Toyota building $192M green-car battery plant - Action News
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Toyota building $192M green-car battery plant

Toyota is building a $192-million US plant in Japan to produce batteries for hybrid cars, as the race to produce green cars intensifies among the world's automakers.

Toyota is building a $192-million US plant in Japan to produce batteries for gas-electric hybrid vehicles, as it seeks to keep its lead in an intensifying race for green cars among the world's automakers.

Toyota's joint venture with Matsushita Electric Industrial Co., which makes Panasonic brand products, is building the plant in Shizuoka prefecture, in central Japan, Toyota spokesman Paul Nolasco said Friday. He declined to give more details.

The plant will produce nickel-metal hydride batteries, now in the company's hit Prius hybrid.

The Nikkei, Japan's top business daily, reported Friday that Toyota was building another plant in Japan to make lithium-ion batteries, set to be running by 2010, for future ecological cars. Nolasco said no decision has been made on such a plant.

Japan's top automaker, which leads the industry in gas-electric hybrids with its Prius, has said it will rev up hybrid sales toone million a year sometime after 2010.

Hybrids reduce pollution and emissions that are linked to global warming by switching between a gas engine and an electric motor to deliver better mileage than comparable standard cars but they are still a niche market.

The Prius, which has been on sale for more than a decade, recently reached cumulative sales of one million vehicles.

'Hybrids are starting to make a lot more economic sense.' Rebecca Lindland, analyst

Lithium-ion batteries, now common in laptops, produce more power and are smaller than nickel-metal hydride batteries. Toyota has said the lithium-ion batteries may be used in plug-in hybrids, which can be recharged from a home electrical outlet.

Hybrids gaining favour as pump prices soar

Rebecca Lindland, an industry research director at Global Insight, said hybrids are increasingly attractive in the U.S., which had in the past favoured pickups and other gas guzzlers, as fuel prices surge, environmental concerns grow and tougher emission standards kick in.

"Hybrids are starting to make a lot more economic sense," she said at the Foreign Correspondents' Club in Tokyo, noting that the payback for a hybrid's higher price comes a lot faster these days.

Lindland said the Prius owed its success to being "very well-badged" as an unmistakable hybrid to consumers.

The world's other major automakers are also working on environmentally friendly cars, and the race is on to produce the best batteries to power them.

Earlier this week, Honda Motor Co., Japan's second-biggest automaker, said it will boost hybrid sales to 500,000 a year by sometime after 2010. Honda said it will introduce a new model sold solely as a hybrid next year, so the Tokyo-based company will have four hybrids in its lineup.

Nissan Motor Co., which still hasn't developed its own hybrid system for commercial sale, said it will have its original hybrid by 2010. Nissan is focusing more on electric vehicles, promising them for the U.S. and Japanese markets by 2010.

Nissan said this week its joint venture with electronics maker NEC Corp. will start mass-producing lithium-ion batteries in 2009 at a plant in Japan.