Nissan, Renault, Mitsubishi plan $1bn fund for mobility startups

epa06358459 The Nissan Kicks is displayed at the LA Auto Show at the Convention Center in Los Angeles, California, USA, 29 November 2017. AutoMobility LA is a press and trade event which showcases the future of transportation. The event takes place 27 to 30 November 2017 and precedes the Los Angeles Auto Show which runs 01 to 10 December.  EPA-EFE/MIKE NELSON

Bloomberg

The world’s largest automotive alliance will invest as much as $1 billion to fund mobility startups over the next five years as it looks to make inroads with new technology at a time of rapid upheaval for the transportation sector.
Carmaking partners Renault SA, Nissan Motor Co. and Mitsubishi Motors Corp. will invest as much as $200 million during the venture capital fund’s first year, the alliance said in a statement. The fund, called Alliance Ventures, will finance new developments in electrification, autonomy, connectivity and artificial intelligence.
“The way we’re organised now is not sufficient,” Carlos Ghosn, chairman of the alliance, said in a Bloomberg
Television interview at CES in Las Vegas, citing a need for the creativity of startups and outside partners. “I don’t think we can do it alone.”
Global automakers are seeking to marry their manufacturing prowess with the nimbleness of startups that are working on electrification,
artificial intelligence and autonomous driving—technologies that are transforming the industry. The formation of the alliance fund follows similar moves by competitors including General Motors Co.’s GM Ventures LLC, BMW Group’s i Ventures and Toyota Motor Corp.’s Toyota AI Ventures.
The fund’s first strategic investment is in Ionic Materials Inc., a Woburn, Massachusetts-based company developing cobalt-free solid-state battery materials that can be used in electric vehicles.
In September, the Franco-Japanese alliance announced plans to introduce 12 new purely electric vehicles by 2022 while extending the models’ range and cutting battery costs. It also plans to bring to market 40 vehicles with autonomous-drive technology.
“It is a classic approach but it should be put under the context that we are going to concentrate our efforts on electric cars, autonomous drive at different levels, ending with robotaxis,” Ghosn told reporters at a CES press conference in Las Vegas. This fund “serves as an additional platform for what we want to do,” he said.
Renault and Nissan will each fund 40 percent of Alliance Ventures—which will be
co-located in Silicon Valley, Paris, Beijing and Yokohama, Japan—while Mitsubishi will contribute the rest.
The $200 million initial venture capital investment is in addition to the more than $10 billion in total annual research and development spending by the alliance’s members, according to their statement.
Major automobile makers have also been partnering with both small and established technology companies for robotaxis and self-driving cars.

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