Nissan’s little hatch could be revived as an electric car.

Nissan is turning to its Alliance partner Renault to see if it’s worthwhile making a successor to the current Nissan Micra which is no longer for sale in Australia – but the car in question is all but certain to mark a switch to pure-electric power.

Speaking to Automotive Daily, Nissan’s European boss Guillaume Cartier said that the firm is not yet ready to commit to a Micra successor and admitted that it is investigating which Alliance resources might allow it to build such a car. “The core business today and tomorrow is crossover – Juke, Qashqai, X-Trail, Ariya, and the new car that we’ve spoken about [the Leaf-replacing crossover EV],” he said. “That’s already five cars. Then for each car we have to make sure that we have the depth – enough powertrains to match the volumes we have. We want to make sure that this core, in terms of volume per model, is increasing.

“Then we use the Alliance. We will work with the Alliance for our full line-up of LCVs.  But one topic remains open, and this is the entry point of the line-up. The key point is to say, ‘How can we offer something, potentially with the Alliance, that will lure people to enter into the Nissan brand, and then enjoy to go model by model?’ That’s the one that we are considering. That’s exactly the question that we have to solve.”

When asked directly if the car in question would need to be electric, Cartier said, “Yes, that’s absolutely key.”

It seems all but certain, therefore, that Nissan is talking to its Alliance partner Renault about using the CMF-BEV architecture that’s already earmarked for the replacement for the French brand’s Zoe electric supermini, the retro-themed 5. That model is earmarked for introduction in 2024, by which point the current Micra will have passed beyond its usual seven-year model cycle.

That schedule will also be uncomfortably close to the proposed EU7 introduction date – and Cartier confirmed that Nissan has no plans to invest in its engines and vehicles to make them compliant with the new rules. “Strategically we are betting on electrification,” he said, “to the point where we are not investing in Euro 7.”

It is conceivable that Nissan could, in the end, decide to walk away from the supermini market altogether. Cartier insisted that “no conclusions have been drawn yet” on the potential use of the Alliance platform and perhaps significantly, his overall boss, Nissan CEO Makoto Uchida said that he believes the firm’s global product portfolio is currently too extensive. “If you ask me do we have sufficient number of cars for Nissan today, worldwide I think it’s too many,” Uchida said. “We want to maximise our core product with more volume. That’s what we’re trying to do.”

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