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Nissan teams up with LeasePlan to take electric Nissan LEAF to the road
20 September 2010 - Today, LeasePlan and Nissan signed an agreement to cooperate in a European-wide project to launch the 100% electric Nissan LEAF in 2011. LeasePlan is the first leasing company to offer the Nissan LEAF in Europe. The car will be mass-marketed globally from 2012 onwards.
LeasePlan will purchase more than 100 Nissan LEAF electric vehicles from Nissan and will offer
them to its customers in thirteen countries in Europe, starting in early 2011 in line with
Nissan's launch plans in those markets. The project will focus on driver behaviour and the
operational side of running a fleet of zero-emission battery-powered cars.
The thirteen countries involved in the agreement are Belgium, Denmark, Finland, France, Italy,
Luxembourg, the Netherlands, Norway, Portugal, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland and the United
Kingdom.
LeasePlan operates a fleet of more than 1.3 million vehicles globally and is therefore the
ideal partner in innovative car solutions. LeasePlan's expertise on the fleet management value
chain will provide Nissan with vital information for the future.
"We have done a great deal of research into potential usage patterns for Nissan LEAF, but there
is nothing to beat the real-world experience. By exchanging data with industry leader
LeasePlan, we will be better able to understand just how eV customers will use their cars,"
said Colin Dodge, Executive Vice President, Nissan Motor Co., Ltd.
Commenting on the announcement, LeasePlan's CEO Vahid Daemi said: "This agreement with Nissan
is a reflection of our drive for innovation in a changing car landscape and further proof of
our corporate responsibility towards the environment. With the electric Nissan LEAF, we will be
able to meet our customers' growing demand for more environmentally friendly modes of
transportation."
With its compact, highly efficient lithium-ion batteries and powerful electric motor, the
five-seater Nissan LEAF has a range of about 160 km (100 miles – LA4 mode) while a suitable
quick charge system can restore up to 80 per cent of its battery power in just under 30
minutes. Instantly responsive acceleration is matched by a top speed of more than 140 km/h.
Best of all, there are no tailpipe emissions, making the compact zero-emission family car the
ideal mode of transport for crowded inner cities.
Deliveries of the Nissan LEAF begin in Europe in the first quarter of 2011.
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