Sony, Honda sign JV to sell electric cars by 2025


FILE PHOTO: Sony Corp's and Honda Motor's logos are pictured at their joint news conference venue in Tokyo, Japan, March 4, 2022. REUTERS/Kim Kyung-Hoon

(Reuters) - Japan's Sony and Honda Motor on Thursday officially agreed to an equally owned joint venture that will start selling electric cars in 2025.

Honda, like bigger rival Toyota Motor, has been slower to shift to electric vehicles (EV) than global automakers and is under pressure from investors to make cars that are carbon-free and equipped with newer technology such as self-driving features.

The car maker, which only offers one EV, Honda e, has said it plans to roll out 30 EV models and make some 2 million EVs annually by 2030.

To the JV, first announced in March and named Sony Honda Mobility, Honda will bring its expertise in building and selling cars and Sony will add its software and technology chops, the companies said in a statement on Thursday.

Each company will invest 5 billion yen ($37.52 million) in the JV.

Yasuhide Mizuno, a senior Honda executive, will serve as the JV's chairman and CEO, and Izumi Kawanishi, an executive vice president at Sony, will be the president and chief operating officer.

Honda, maker of popular models such as Accord and Civic, is dealing with crimped margins as costs of raw materials have surged and a global chip crunch hurts production.

Earlier this year, the company said it would develop a series of lower-priced EVs with General Motors, based on a new joint platform, expanding on plans for GM to begin building two electric SUVs for Honda starting in 2024.

Shares in Honda and other Japanese automakers were down between 3% and 5% on Friday as world stocks were set to slide amid fears that sharp interest rate increases by central banks would tip economies into recession.

($1 = 133.2800 yen)

(Reporting by Sayantani Ghosh in Singapore. Editing by Gerry Doyle)

Follow us on our official WhatsApp channel for breaking news alerts and key updates!

   

Next In Tech News

Crypto company Tether invests $200 million in brain-chip maker Blackrock Neurotech
EU to probe Meta over handling of Russian disinformation, FT reports
US man charged with sex-related crimes, used Instagram to lure teens
Apple's iPadOS subject to tough EU tech rules, EU says
TikTok creators fear economic blow of US ban
OpenAI to use FT content for training AI models in latest media tie-up
ChatGPT faces Austria complaint for ‘uncorrectable errors’
Social media platform X back up after outages, Downdetector shows
Sleeping Amazon driver’s fatal crash into teacher was preventable, US lawsuit says
Elon Musk’s China trip pays off with key self-driving hurdles cleared

Others Also Read