Nissan has unveiled the first of its new electric vehicles as part of a turnaround strategy for the loss-making company.
The Japanese carmaker is hoping its new all-electric sports utility vehicle (SUV) Ariya will sell well in China.
But it faces tough competition from Tesla which has a strong presence in the world's largest car market.
Electric cars are a cornerstone of Nissan's four-year plan to get it back to profitability.
The Ariya was launched online on Wednesday from the company's headquarters in Yokohama, Japan. Nissan chief executive Makoto Uchida referred to the all-electric SUV as the "flagship of the new Nissan".
By 2023 Nissan plans to launch more than eight new electric models, and sees China as a core market. The Chinese government offers generous incentives for buyers of electric cars below a certain price.
In 2019, just over 20 million cars were sold in China, compared to 17 million in the US.
Nissan was regarded as one of the early front-runners in electric vehicles (EV) but experts say it has lost momentum since it launched its all-electric Leaf back in 2010.
"The Ariya will be a brand builder for Nissan which has historically been an EV leader," said Nobuhito Massimiliano Abe, a principal at market research firm Kearney's Automotive Practice.
But its newly-launched model could face tough competition from Tesla which became the best-selling new energy vehicle in China in May.
Elon Musk's firm is currently expanding Teslas's "Gigafactory" in Shanghai to build more Model Ys - its own all-electric SUV.
"Clearly out in front is Tesla at the moment. It's got the EV cachet," said Calum MacRae, head of automotive R&A at GlobalData. "But given the sheer size of the Chinese market and technological lead that market could yet spawn a global competitor to Tesla."
In May, Nissan reported an operating loss of 40.5bn yen ($380m; £303m) for the year ending 31 March. It was the company's worst performance since 2009 - the height of the global financial crisis.
The brand has also been damaged by the controversial departure of former chairman Carlos Ghosn who fled Japan after being detained on financial misconduct charges last year.
Nissan has announced its Barcelona factory will close at the end of this year as part of its restructuring, but its UK factory will remain open.
Latest Stories
-
Ghana-Russia Centre to run Russian language courses in Ghana
2 hours -
The Hidden Costs of Hunger: How food insecurity undermines mental and physical health in the U.S.
3 hours -
18plus4NDC marks 3rd anniversary with victory celebration in Accra
5 hours -
CREMA workshop highlights collaborative efforts to sustain Akata Lagoon
6 hours -
2024/25 Ghana League: Heart of Lions remain top with win over Basake Holy Stars
7 hours -
Black Queens: Nora Hauptle shares cryptic WAFCON preparation message amid future uncertainty
7 hours -
Re-declaration of parliamentary results affront to our democracy – Joyce Bawah
7 hours -
GPL 2024/25: Vision FC score late to deny Young Apostles third home win
7 hours -
Enhancing community initiatives for coastal resilience: Insights from Keta Lagoon Complex Ramsar Site Workshop
8 hours -
Family Health University College earns a Presidential Charter
8 hours -
GPL 2024/25: Bibiani GoldStars beat Nsoatreman to keep title race alive
8 hours -
GPL 2024/25 Bechem United keep title hopes alive with narrow win over FC Samartex
8 hours -
2024/25: Dauda Saaka scores as Asante Kotoko beat Dreams FC
8 hours -
M.anifest reflects on galamsey’s devastation 11 years after ‘No Shortcut to Heaven’
9 hours -
We’ll have the last laugh – Sammy Gyamfi slams EC’s “cantata” re-collation
9 hours