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Nissan Motor Australia

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Nissan Motor Co. (Australia) Pty. Ltd.
Company typeSubsidiary
IndustryAutomotive
Founded1966; 58 years ago (1966)
HeadquartersMulgrave, Victoria
Area served
Australia
Key people
Andrew Humberstone (managing director)
ProductsAutomobiles
ParentNissan
Websitewww.nissan.com.au

Nissan Motor Co. (Australia) Pty. Ltd. is the Australian subsidiary of Nissan and a former automobile manufacturer currently headquartered in Mulgrave, Victoria. The company assembled passenger cars of the Japanese brand Nissan.

History

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Nissan automobiles were imported to Australia as early as the 1930s.[1] In the early 1960s, the Australian industrialist Lawrence Hartnett became aware of the brand, took over sales and began in 1966 with the assembly of up to 20,000 Bluebirds annually for the Australian market by the Sydney-based Pressed Metal Corporation.[1]

As early as 1968, Nissan was named as a tenant of the closed Volkswagen Australia plant.[2] The Volkswagen subsidiary Motor Producers Limited manufactured Datsun vehicles there from 1968.[3] In 1971, Nissan was able to sell twice as many vehicles as Volkswagen in Australia.[4] The assembly activity was expanded further in 1972.[5]

Following the decision by the Nissan management to meet the Australian government's target of 85% local production, the Clayton plant was to be converted back to full production (instead of assembling kits). Since Volkswagen no longer wanted to invest in the plant, a full takeover of Motor Producers Limited by Nissan was agreed.[6] The local CKD assembly of Volkswagen vehicles was to be carried out under the responsibility of Nissan from April 1976 until it was finally discontinued in March 1977.[6]

Independent production in Clayton began in 1977 with the Datsun 200B. The Australian model had a different rear axle than its Japanese counterpart.[7] Other assembled models were Nissan Gazelle and Nissan Pulsar, which were supplemented by Nissan Skyline and Nissan Pintara in 1986.[1] Nissan's automobile production in Australia ended in 1992.[8][9] Production had fallen to less than 36,000 vehicles in 1991, after nearly 58,000 were made in 1990.[9]

At Nissan Australia, cast parts are currently still mainly manufactured in a factory that was built in 1982.[10]

In 2009 Nissan launched Nissan Financial Services, a wholly owned subsidiary of Nissan Australia to provide financial services to its dealers and customers. In 2013 Nissan Financial Services Australia established a wholly owned subsidiary in New Zealand, Nissan Financial Services New Zealand Pty Ltd. Nissan Financial Services Australia Pty Ltd and Nissan Financial services New Zealand Pty Ltd are headed by their Managing Director Andrew Maeer.

1986 Nissan Pintara GX Sedan (R31). The Pintara was produced by Nissan Australia from 1986 to 1992.

References

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  1. ^ a b c Nissan's History in Australia, in: nissandiscounts.com.au.
  2. ^ Läuft nicht mehr In: Der Spiegel, Ausgabe 46/1968 11 November 1968. (retrieved 5 February 2018)
  3. ^ Phil Matthews: 1965 - 1969: Australian Volkswagen History.
  4. ^ Phil Matthews: 1970 - 1975: Australian Volkswagen History.
  5. ^ Committed to the future, Nissan celebrates 35 years of ongoing local manufacturing Archived 6 February 2018 at the Wayback Machine, Nissan-Pressemitteilung 16 November 2017.
  6. ^ a b Phil Matthews: 1975 - 1979: Australian Volkswagen History.
  7. ^ James Stanford (21 August 2015). "12 orphan cars built in Australia". Wheelsmag.com.au. Retrieved 3 February 2018.
  8. ^ Ron Hammerton (25 February 2014). "Nissan plant survives Aussie auto wipeout". Goauto.com.au. Retrieved 3 February 2018.
  9. ^ a b Takahiro Fujimoto, "Toyota Motor Manufacturing Australia in 1995: an emergent global strategy", in: Actes du GERPISA Nr. 26 (1998), S. 37–62.
  10. ^ Nissan celebrates 35 years of manufacturing in Australia, www.drive.com.au, 16 November 2017, as archived at web.archive.org