Japanese automaker Toyota started building an electric vehicle (EV) plant in Shanghai today, said the local government.
Toyota established a subsidiary Lexus (Shanghai) New Energy in the Jinshan district of Shanghai in February to develop EVs and EV batteries.
The company signed an agreement with the municipal government of Shanghai and the government of Jinshan district in April to move forward with this project.
The plant aims to produce 100,000 EVs a year and to start delivering in 2027. Construction is expected to be completed in 2026.
Toyota will be the sole owner of the new China-based firm — an unusual move as foreign automobile producers typically form a joint venture with a local car manufacturer. Tesla's Shanghai factory is the last wholly foreign-owned automaker in China.
The Japanese firm's new venture in China and its moves in the US are part of the company's wider strategy to sell 1.5mn EVs by 2026.
Its new Shanghai project aims to deliver its EV brand "swiftly" to Chinese customers.
But Toyota's EV sales in China may face challenges in a highly competitive market, according to industry participants. China has more than 40 domestic new energy vehicle manufacturers.