Renault–Nissan Common Module Family
The Common Module Family (CMF) is a modular architecture concept jointly developed by car manufacturers Nissan and Renault through their Renault–Nissan–Mitsubishi Alliance partnership. The concept covers a wide range of vehicle platforms.
Renault Kwid
Renault City K-ZE
Venucia e30
Dongfeng Aeolus EX1
Renault–Nissan–Mitsubishi Alliance
The Renault–Nissan–Mitsubishi Alliance, originally known as the Renault–Nissan Alliance, is a French-Japanese strategic alliance between the automobile manufacturers Renault, Nissan and Mitsubishi Motors, which together sell more than one in nine vehicles worldwide. Renault and Nissan are strategic partners since 1999 and have nearly 450,000 employees and control eight major brands: Renault, Nissan, Mitsubishi, Infiniti, Renault Korea, Dacia, Alpine, and Venucia. The car group sold 10.6 million vehicles worldwide in 2017, making it the leading light vehicle manufacturing group in the world. The Alliance adopted its current name in September 2017, one year after Nissan acquired a controlling interest in Mitsubishi and subsequently made Mitsubishi an equal partner in the Alliance.
Mitsubishi Engelberg Tourer Concept, the first vehicle was based on Nissan X-Trail/Nissan Rogue produced in Japan, developing car platforms are stopped by 2026. Previewed the styling of fourth generation Mitsubishi Outlander.
Carlos Ghosn charges a Nissan Leaf, one of six zero-emission vehicles developed by the Renault–Nissan Alliance as of December 2016[update].
Renault's Zero-Emissions (Z.E.) badge
The Nissan Leaf is the Alliance's best selling electric car, with global sales of over 470,000 units by May 2020, and listed as the all-time top selling electric car until 2019.