Nissan will make a new three-cylinder, one-litre
engine in its powertrain plant at its Resende Industrial Complex in Rio de
Janeiro State, Brazil. "The production of a new three-cylinder engine in Brazil demonstrates that
Nissan is determined to boost its presence in the domestic market with modern,
innovative products made locally. Therefore, we increased the local content
ratio of our products in order to further competitiveness," said Ghosn.
The
new I3 engine will share its assembly line with the 1.6-litre engine which has been produced since
Nissan started operations at
Resende in April 2014.
At
the time, just-auto's Brazilian correspondent Fernando Calmon
reported: "The high engine production capacity suggests the supply of one-litre
engines made by Renault in São José do Pinhais, state of Paraná, may
be switched to engines made by Nissan itself. This displacement class is surging
back into popularity here (currently 40%). Resende’s ultra modern facilities
offer opportunity to develop new engines to replace the current generation of I3
units."
Around
25 people have been hired to assemble the new engine boosting the powertrain
unit's headcount to about 200.
The
engine produces 76hp and 98Nm of torque on both petrol and ethanol. It will go
into the new Versa sedan which will share its assembly line with the March
[Micra] and March Active. With an aluminium block, four valves per cylinder and
high-end technological features, the new engine is claimed to be one of the most
energy efficient in Brazil with high performance and low CO2 emissions.
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