
Nissan tells workers closure of key Oppama plant not decided
Nissan Motor Co on Monday told employees at its signature Oppama plant in Kanagawa Prefecture that reports of its planned closure were not definitive, according to some workers at the factory.
The struggling Japanese automaker was reported on Saturday to be considering shuttering the plant in Yokosuka and the Shonan plant of its unit, Nissan Shatai Co, in Hiratsuka, raising uncertainty over the future employment and treatment of the workforce.
The country's third-biggest automaker by volume said last week that it will shut seven vehicle plants and cut 20,000 jobs globally after logging a net loss of 670.90 billion yen for fiscal 2024.
Nissan pioneered electric vehicle production at the Oppama plant, which has an annual production capacity of around 240,000 vehicles and employed 3,900 people, including researchers, as of the end of October last year. The Shonan plant builds commercial vehicles.
The prefectural government held an emergency meeting on Monday to discuss offering consultation and reemployment services in reaction to the potential closures.
"If they really do close, it will have a huge impact on employment and the economy," Kanagawa Gov Yuji Kuroiwa said at the meeting. "We will consider our options from a multitude of angles."
Following the discussions, Kuroiwa told reporters that Nissan contacted the prefecture on Saturday after the initial reports. Nissan officials visited the prefectural office on Monday to inform it that nothing has been decided.
The prefectural government conveyed to Nissan its hope that the automaker will endeavor to limit the consequences of its actions.
During a regular press conference on the same day, Yokosuka Mayor Katsuaki Kamiji emphasized the importance of the more than 60-year history of the Oppama plant and said he hoped it would be "restored to its former brilliance."
Nissan officials also visited the city on Monday.
© KYODO

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

an hour ago
Japan to Set Up Ministerial Council for Farm Policy Reform
News from Japan Society Jun 2, 2025 22:38 (JST) Tokyo, June 2 (Jiji Press)--The Japanese government said Monday that it will establish a ministerial council for the reform of the country's agricultural policy in order to tackle soaring rice prices. At the council headed by Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba, ministers will discuss the government's policy of curbing rice production with subsidies to encourage rice farmers to change crops. The first meeting is expected to be held Thursday. The current rice policy is "beyond the limit," Ishiba told the Budget Committee of the House of Councillors, the upper chamber of parliament. It is necessary to review the policy including the rice production adjustments and draw a conclusion as soon as possible so that farmers and consumers will feel reassured, Ishiba said. Amid a downtrend of demand for rice, the government promoted rice paddy acreage cuts, or "gentan," based on its supply and demand projections, from the 1970s. [Copyright The Jiji Press, Ltd.] Jiji Press


Kyodo News
3 hours ago
- Kyodo News
Japan whaling ship returns after taking 25 fin whales in Okhotsk
KYODO NEWS - 7 hours ago - 12:35 | All, Japan A commercial whaling ship returned to a port in northeastern Japan on Monday carrying 25 fin whales taken in the Sea of Okhotsk. The fin whale hunt in Japan's exclusive economic zone, north of the northern island of Hokkaido, was conducted for the first time since Japan formally withdrew from the International Whaling Commission in 2019. About 320 tons of fin whale meat were unloaded at Sendai port in Miyagi Prefecture on Monday, with some 1.6 tons set to be transported to six markets across the country including Tokyo and Osaka as raw meat. The ship departed Shimonoseki port in the western Japanese prefecture of Yamaguchi on April 21. The Japanese Fisheries Agency added fin whales to the list of commercial whaling target species in 2024, setting a catch quota of 60 for this year. As an International Whaling Commission member, Japan halted commercial whaling in 1988 but continued to hunt whales for what it called research purposes. The practice was criticized internationally as a cover for commercial whaling. Related coverage: Global warrant for anti-whaling group founder suspended


Nikkei Asia
4 hours ago
- Nikkei Asia
Can Japanese nuclear power plants ever find a home in Vietnam?
TOKYO -- Japan and Vietnam agreed to deepen energy cooperation during Japanese Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba's visit to the Southeast Asian country in late April. However, the joint statement released after a summit between the two governments made only a passing reference to nuclear power -- a subject of considerable public interest. While in Hanoi, Ishiba met with Vietnam's top leader, Communist Party General Secretary To Lam, as well as Prime Minister Pham Minh Chinh, who ranks third in the country's political hierarchy. The two sides pledged to expand bilateral cooperation in areas such as security, energy and decarbonization.