- Five years on, Nissan reports 99.99% battery success rate across Europe
- More reliable than a petrol or diesel engine, according to industry averages
- Nissan LEAF is the world's bestselling allelectric car, with over 165,000 sold globally
Five years and more than 35,000 European sales since the launch of its allelectric LEAF, proprietary data released by Nissan for the first time shows that 99.99 percent of its battery units remain entirely fit for purpose.
The findings will silence naysayers who, in 2010, claimed that "batteries would need to be fully replaced after three years," or that "highmileage LEAFs would experience a noticeable drop in battery capacity in the first year of ownership."
In fact, the failure rate of the battery power unit is less than 0.01 percent or just three units in total a fraction of the equivalent industrywide figure for defects affecting traditional combustion engines.
To prove the longterm reliability of the battery technology, Nissan tracked down a rather infamous early model, whose owner is still enjoying faultfree motoring in her LEAF three years on: http://youtu.be/6V1bJJwJhEg
Electric vehicle advocate and presenter of online TV channel Fully Charged, Robert Llewellyn commented: "This comes as no surprise. There was a lot of apprehension about electric technology in the beginning, but with sales climbing monthonmonth I struggle to see how these myths continue to be regurgitated today." The Nissan LEAF has smashed its own sales record with a 33 percent increase in sales in 2014 over the previous year, taking more than a quarter of the burgeoning electric car market with 15,098 sales.
JeanPierre Diernaz, Director of Electric Vehicles for Nissan in Europe, comments: "The facts speak for themselves. The rate of battery faults in our vehicles is negligible, even the most ardent critic cannot argue with that. "The battery technology is just part of our success story. With over 165,000 customers globally, it's clear that we're not the only people who are thrilled by the success of this stateoftheart
technology."
With just three main components the onboard charger, inverter and motor the Nissan LEAF is also 40 percent
cheaper to maintain compared to petrol or dieselpowered alternatives. The Nissan LEAF launched over four years ago in 2010, as one of the first massmarket, pureelectric vehicles. It is now the bestselling electric vehicle in history, with over 165,000 LEAF vehicles sold globally, more than 35,000 of which have been sold in Europe; clocking up an impressive one billion kilometres worldwide
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