Renault and Nissan on the verge of galvanising alliance with new agreement

On 30 January the Renault Group announced in a statement that, subject to the approval of its board of directors, it has reached an important milestone in its discussions on defining new foundations for the group’s partnership with Nissan Motor Co, Ltd.

Sebastien chiron lafj7 N Hbq Ic unsplash

The restructuring of their two-decade-old car-making alliance will put them on equal footing and see the Japanese company invest in Renault's new electric vehicle business. The future shape of the Franco-Japanese alliance will also have implications for their junior partner, Mitsubishi.

According to the statement, this comes after months of “constructive discussions”.

Renault said their ambition in this regard was to strengthen the ties of the Alliance and maximise value creation for all stakeholders with a three-stage approach:

  • Reloading the partnership with high-value-creation operational projects
  • This would consist of key projects in Latin America, India and Europe, which would be deployed along 3 dimensions: markets, vehicles and technologies.
  • Nissan to invest in Ampere, the EV & Software pure player founded by Renault Group, aiming to become a strategic shareholder.
  • The Alliance Operating Board would remain the coordination forum.
  • Enhancing strategic agility with new initiatives that partners can join
  • A balanced governance and cross-shareholding to foster accelerated operational efficiencies
    • Renault Group and Nissan would retain a 15% cross-shareholding, with a lock-up obligation, as well as a standstill obligation. They would both be able to freely exercise the voting rights attached to their 15% direct shareholding, with a 15% cap.
    • Renault Group would transfer 28.4% of Nissan shares into a French trust, where the voting rights would be “neutralised” for most of the decisions, but the economic rights (dividends and shares’ sale proceeds) would still entirely benefit Renault Group until such shares are sold.
    • Renault Group would instruct the trustee to sell the entrusted Nissan shares if commercially reasonable for Renault Group in a coordinated and orderly process, but it would have no obligation to sell the shares within a specific pre-determined period of time.

The Statement concluded by saying that “the agreements are being finalised and the transaction remains subject to the approval of the boards of directors of Renault Group and Nissan. The Alliance members plan to make an announcement immediately after the board approvals.”

More Industry News stories

Committee pushes for faster localisation and job growth

Committee pushes for faster localisation and job growth

Parliament’s Portfolio Committee on Trade, Industry and Competition has renewed calls for stronger localisation, expanded job creation and deeper transformation in South Africa’s automotive industry after reviewing progress on the South African Automotive Industry Master Plan 2035.

  • 2 February 2026
UD Trucks maintains a steadfast market presence in South Africa

UD Trucks maintains a steadfast market presence in South Africa

As economic pressures and market volatility continue to shape the local transport industry, UD Trucks Southern Africa says it has demonstrated confident and stable growth, supported by strong retail partnerships and a relentless focus on customer uptime.

  • 2 February 2026
Keyloop agrees to acquire Motortech.ai

Keyloop agrees to acquire Motortech.ai

Keyloop, a global automotive technology company, has signed an agreement to acquire Motortech.ai, a United Kingdom-based (UK) developer of state-of-the-art artificial intelligence (AI) solutions for the automotive industry.

  • 2 February 2026