It has been awhile since Nissan launched an eco car
in Thailand after the successful March and Almera. A third one was recently
confirmed for this year, and it’s the Note. Now, Sureethip La-Ongthong
Chomthongdee, VP of marketing at Nissan Motor Thailand, has told Bangkok Post
that the high-roofed hatchback will be launched in the first half of this year.
She said that Nissan – which was first on the eco
car scene and has since produced over 500,000 eco cars in the first phase – is
set to start production under the second phase eco car project in early 2017.
For the second phase, Nissan plans to spend 6.86 billion baht to make 123,000
eco cars and two million auto parts annually at its Bang Na-Trat Road factory
in Thailand.
The second phase of Thailand’s eco car plan promises
even more affordable cars, with excise tax cut to 12-14% from 17% in the first
phase. Launched in late 2013, the second phase drew applications from Mazda,
Ford, General Motors, SAIC Motor-CP (MG) and Volkswagen, joining first phase
companies Nissan, Honda, Mitsubishi, Suzuki and Toyota. Mazda was first off the
blocks with second phase production (with the Mazda 2), but GM withdrew in
2015.
The latest Note facelift with a range extender
hybrid system was unveiled for the Japanese market in October. Called the Note
e-Power, the JDM car adds on an electric motor to the equation. The petrol
engine, a 1.2L three-cylinder engine, is not connected to the front axle, and
merely powers the motor – it’s a unique system that you can read in detail
here.
Nissan recently brought Thai journalists to sample
the Note e-Power in Japan, and reports confirmed predictions that the hybrid
powerplant will not make it to Thailand. Nissan is yet to test the e-Power
system for global usage, but taxation and cost is the main reason why it won’t
power the Thai eco car, which has to be affordable.
That will leave the Thai Note with just the HR12DE
three-cylinder engine without the electric motor. It will be a familiar and
proven engine for the market, as it currently powers the March hatchback and
Almera sedan in the country. The 79 PS/106 Nm unit will be paired to a CVT
automatic gearbox in the roomy five-door hatch, which will be cheaper than the
Honda Jazz in Thailand as the latter is not an eco car.
Thai reports from Japan also note the possibility of
active safety features being included in the Note eco car, such as automatic
emergency braking and lane departure warning. If so, it would be the first eco
car to boast such kit.