Toyota is pushing again the beginning date for electrical automobile (EV) manufacturing within the US, as world demand for battery-powered automobiles continues to melt.
The Japanese motor trade large was aiming to start out manufacturing in late 2025 or early 2026.
Toyota now expects to launch its US EV operation at an unspecified time in 2026, an organization spokesperson advised BBC Information.
A number of different main automobile makers, together with Volvo and Ford, have not too long ago scaled again their EV plans.
“We’re nonetheless centered on our world [battery electric vehicle] goal of 1.5M autos by 2026,” stated Toyota spokesperson Scott Vazin, including that within the subsequent two years it plans to introduce “5 to 7 [battery electric vehicles] within the US market.”
Earlier this yr, the agency introduced it was investing $1.3bn (£980m) in its Kentucky manufacturing unit as a part of plans to construct a three-row, electrical sport utility automobile (SUV) there.
The corporate has additionally introduced plans to construct one other electrical mannequin at a plant in Indiana.
To assist these objectives Toyota is ramping up its lithium-ion battery manufacturing with a manufacturing unit in North Carolina, which it expects will come on-line subsequent yr.
Toyota’s announcement got here as the worldwide automobile trade continues to wrestle with weakening demand for electrical autos in some main markets.
On Wednesday, Tesla’s quarterly figures missed Wall Avenue expectations, placing main EV maker susceptible to its first-ever decline in annual deliveries.
Final month, Volvo abandoned its target to produce only fully electric cars by 2030, saying it now anticipated to be promoting some hybrid autos by that date.
The corporate blamed altering market circumstances for its determination to surrender a goal it had introduced solely three years in the past.
In August, Ford announced that it is shaking up its strategy for electric vehicles, scrapping plans for a big, three-row, all-electric SUV and suspending the launch of its subsequent electrical pickup truck.
Chief monetary officer John Lawler stated the agency was adjusting its plans in response to “pricing and margin compression”.