A Surprising Alliance in Sunderland
Nissan and Chinese automaker Chery International UK signed a non-binding agreement to study building Chery passenger vehicles at Nissan's giant plant in Sunderland, England. Under this setup, Chery will use Line One of the factory starting in Nissan's 2027 fiscal year. This arrangement allows Chery to build cars locally in the United Kingdom without spending years and billions of dollars to construct a brand-new factory. Talk about a massive shortcut to the British market.
At the same time, Nissan gets to fill a glaring gap in its manufacturing operations. To lower costs and streamline global production, the Japanese automaker launched a huge restructuring plan that left extra space on its main assembly line. By renting out this unused capacity, Nissan keeps its machines humming and offsets the high costs of updating its facilities. It is a brilliant way to make money off your own rival.
In an unusual twist, Nissan will maintain full ownership of the Sunderland site and keep all workers on its own payroll. This is a strict contract manufacturing deal, not a factory sale. For the local workers, this means their jobs remain secure under the same employer even as they assemble completely different brands. They will literally build British-built Japanese hatchbacks and Chinese-branded SUVs under the exact same roof.
The Global Trade Watcher's Reality Check
This cohabitation makes sense when viewing the global stage. Tariffs and geopolitical tensions are forcing Chinese firms to act fast. By setting up shop inside the UK, Chery dodges high import duties that would otherwise ruin its profit margins. Indeed, the roots of this strategy trace back to July 2024, when the European Union imposed provisional tariffs on Chinese electric vehicles of up to 38 percent.
Because the UK maintains its own trade rules post-Brexit, it represents a unique entry point.
By utilizing Sunderland, Chery secures a local production site that bypasses both high import duties and the shipping delays of the Suez Canal.
Look at Spain, where Chery already took over an old Nissan plant in Barcelona to gain a foothold in the European Union.
This strategic move directly mirrors how Japanese automakers bypassed US import limits in the 1980s by building plants in Ohio and Tennessee.
History is simply repeating itself, but with a Chinese twist.
By the Numbers: Sunderland's Survival Math
While global trade strategy dictates these high-level moves, the daily reality on the factory floor comes down to simple survival math. Since its opening in 1986, the Sunderland factory has built over 11 million vehicles, making it a cornerstone of British manufacturing. However, production numbers have fluctuated wildly in recent years due to supply chain snarls and the phase-out of older internal combustion models.
Introducing Chery's Omoda 5 and Jaecoo 7 platforms to Line One injects fresh volume.
With Nissan's ambitious three-billion-pound EV36Zero electric hub plan underway, keeping Line One active with contract work provides crucial cash flow during this tricky transition.
Unpacking the Secret Motivations Behind the Deal
Beyond immediate cash flow, this arrangement sparks questions about the deeper, mutually beneficial secrets behind the partnership. And yet, why would Nissan willingly invite a fierce competitor into its own house? Perhaps the answer lies in the massive cost of battery technology. Here are a few fascinating possibilities hinted at by this partnership:
- Under the current rules of origin, cars built in the UK must use a high percentage of local parts to avoid heavy tariffs when shipped to Europe.
- By sharing a roof, both companies might eventually share local supply chains for battery packs and electric motors.
- But let us think even bigger: this could lead to shared logistics, where combining shipping routes saves fuel and money—imagine a transport truck leaving the Sunderland gates carrying a Nissan Qashqai on the bottom rack and an Omoda 5 on the top rack.
Personally, I find the design of the upcoming Jaecoo 9 plug-in hybrid incredibly wild because it attempts to merge rugged off-road styling with ultra-sleek digital screens. If British workers start building these bold designs, they will learn new manufacturing tricks that could help Nissan design better cars. It is a win-win disguised as a threat.