Japan's Toyota announces EV and battery push in China and U.S., as its
quarterly profit surges
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[February 05, 2025] By
YURI KAGEYAMA
TOKYO (AP) — Toyota is developing and making electric vehicles and EV
batteries in China, the Japanese automaker said Wednesday, under a new
partnership with the Shanghai government.
Toyota Motor Corp. also announced it will start producing batteries for
EVs, hybrids and plug-ins at a new $14 billion facility in North
Carolina, with shipping starting for North American models in April.
The moves highlight Toyota’s aggressive push in electric cars, a sector
where some critics have said it’s fallen behind rivals like Tesla and
BYD at a time when the Chinese EV market is booming and the world's
concerns about sustainability are increasingly crucial.
Toyota is setting up a company in Jinshan district in southwest Shanghai
for that effort, with production of the new Lexus EVs starting in 2027.
Initial production capacity there totals 100,000 vehicles a year, which
will create about 1,000 jobs, the world’s top automaker said. The
battery plant in the U.S. will create some 5,000 jobs, according to
Toyota.
Toyota’s push also comes as worries grow around Asia about a potential
trade war brewing after President Donald Trump imposed tariffs on
Chinese goods and China retaliated with tariffs to take effect next
week.
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“We have always tried to be a company that will be loved wherever we do
our business. That has never waffled,” Chief Financial Officer Yoichi
Miyazaki told reporters without addressing the tariffs.
Also Wednesday, Toyota reported fiscal third quarter profit jumped 61%
from the previous fiscal year to 2.19 trillion yen ($14 billion), on
12.4 trillion yen ($81 billion) sales, up 3% on-year.
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People walk by the logo of Toyota at a show room in Tokyo,
Aug. 2, 2019. (AP Photo/Eugene Hoshiko, File)
 Toyota officials said sales were
recovering from the drop earlier this fiscal year after some
production was suspended over a certification scandal in Japan.
Last year, Toyota acknowledged wide-ranging fraudulent testing,
including the use of inadequate or outdated data in crash tests,
incorrect testing of airbag inflation and engine power checks. The
wrongdoing did not affect the safety of the vehicles, and only
affected production in Japan.
Toyota revised its profit forecast for the full fiscal year through
March 2025 to 4.5 trillion yen ($29 billion) from the previous
projection for a 3.6 trillion yen ($24 billion) profit, thanks to
the positive effect of the foreign exchange rate and cost reduction
efforts. The new projection still falls short of what Toyota racked
up the previous fiscal year at 4.9 trillion yen.
The new company in China is part of Toyota’s drive to meet the high
demand for EVs in China, according to Toyota. Toyota already has
China FAW Group Co. and Guangzhou Automobile Group Co. as its
longtime partners in China, and those will continue unchanged, he
said.
Toyota said it hopes to contribute to the Chinese government’s goal
of achieving carbon neutrality by 2060.
“Local Chinese members will take the lead in planning and developing
BEVs that match the unique needs of Chinese customers. Our goal is
to become a company that is more loved and supported by the people
of China,” said Miyazaki.
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