Nikkei Hyundai Motors to Re-enter Japan in 2022 … Honored Recall with Hydrogen Electric Vehicle



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Nexo, a hydrogen electric vehicle that Hyundai Motor plans to sell in Japan in 2022 (Photo: Nihon Keizai newspaper)

Nexo, a hydrogen electric vehicle that Hyundai Motor plans to sell in Japan in 2022 (Photo: Nihon Keizai newspaper)

Hyundai Motor Company will re-enter the Japanese market in 2022. It has been 13 years since it withdrew from the Japanese market in 2009.

The Nippon Geizai Shimbun reported on the 19th that Hyundai Motors will enter the Japanese market from 2022 with a strategy that specializes in hydrogen and electric vehicles. It is planning to introduce the world’s number one hydrogen electric vehicle ‘Nexo’, the electric sport utility vehicle (SUV) ‘Kona Electric’ and a new electric vehicle to be launched after 2021.

The certification process required for sales has already been completed. In September, Hyundai Motor Company launched a website in Japanese and held the Nexo show and test drive in Tokyo. After that, the view of Hyundai Motors re-entering Japan was constantly raised.

Hyundai Motor Company entered Japan in 2001, but struggled due to its popularity and brand power. In the mid-2000s, thanks to the Korean wave fever, they launched aggressive promotions, but by the end of 2009, the cumulative number of units sold was only 15,000 units. Finally, the same year, the passenger car business ended, leaving only commercial vehicles and R&D organizations.

Hyundai Motor Company, which started a preliminary investigation in the Japanese market since last summer, decided that it could change its brand image by presenting the cutting-edge image of hydrogen electric vehicles and electric vehicles. Hyundai Motors occupies 75% of the global hydrogen electric vehicle market. It is significantly ahead of Toyota’s ‘Mirai’ hydrogen electric vehicle. It is also planned to introduce 23 new electric vehicles by 2025.

They are also known to look forward to the Japanese government’s policy of subsidizing the purchase of electric vehicles and hydrogen electric vehicles. The Japanese government is pushing for a plan to stop selling gasoline and diesel cars in the mid-2030s to reduce real carbon dioxide emissions to ‘zero’ by 2050. Instead, it is considering increasing the subsidy for the purchase. of green cars as a way to rapidly increase the supply of green vehicles.

Tokyo = correspondent Jeong Young-hyo [email protected]

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