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Manufacturing

Nissan's Sunderland plant launches electric Juke and Qashqai production amid multimillion-pound investment

The two electrified models form part of a £500m investment by Nissan into the Wearside site

The new electric versions of the Qashqai and Juke at Nissan(Image: Matt Walker)

The new electric versions of Nissan’s crossover models are now rolling off the lines at the motor manufacturer’s Sunderland Plant.

The Nissan Qashqai is now available with the firm’s e-power system in a first for the firm in Europe, and its Nissan Juke is equipped with an advanced hybrid powertrain. A new £10m assembly line has powered up at the Washington site, where batteries packs are made for both the e-Power and hybrid powertrains, before being delivered to be fitted into vehicles.

The new electric versions have been launched as combined production of the two crossover models has passed five million in the North East. The firm said that the design and manufacture of the Qashqai and Juke support more than 7,000 jobs at its sites in Sunderland, Paddington, Maple Cross, Cranfield, Lutterworth as well as a further 30,000 in the wider º£½ÇÊÓÆµ supply chain and about 5,000 in º£½ÇÊÓÆµ dealerships.

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Alan Johnson, Nissan’s vice president for manufacturing in the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ, said: “With more than five million customers, Qashqai and Juke are two of our plant’s most successful and popular models ever. Both e-Power and hybrid technologies are firsts for the team in Sunderland, so it’s fantastic to see the electrified versions rolling off our two production lines.”

The two electrified models form part of a previously announced £500m investment by Nissan into the Wearside site, to build the Qashqai and Juke.

The investment has included the installation of the £10m state-of-the-art battery assembly facility, as well as building a team with the skills to deliver the new electrified vehicles.

Mr Johnson said that, since the launch of the firm’s first elecric car back - the Leaf - back in 2011, staff at Nissan Sunderland Plant have undergone more than two million hours of trainin, dedicated to manufacturing electrified vehicles, with more planned in the future.