Currently reading: Next Nissan Leaf to be launched with vehicle-to-grid charging in UK

Leaf, Qashqai and Juke successors will arrive from 2026 with a system that could help cut costs

The electric successor to the Nissan Leaf will feature bi-directional vehicle-to-grid (V2G) charging available for use by UK customers when it is launched in 2026.

Nissan says it is the first car firm to both develop a “breakthrough” on-board two-way charging system and secure the certification needed to offer the vehicle-to-grid charging service – in which energy stored in a car’s battery can be sold back to the grid – in the UK.

The service will be offered on “selected electric vehicles” and use a special wallbox that has been developed in partnership with Belgian charger manufacturer Dreev to be capable of accepting electricity in two directions.

Hugues Desmarchelier, Nissan’s global electrification ecosystem chief, described the technology as a “potential game-changer for how we view the car” and said the technology would feature on “almost all the new EVs that we will launch on the market after 2026”. 

This means the system will be offered on the three new EVs that will serve as successors to the current Qashqai, Juke and Leaf and are set to be built as Nissan’s Sunderland plant – but not the EV successor to the Micra, which will be built by Alliance partner Renault alongside the new 5. The Renault 5 is capable of bi-directional charging but will run on a different system, which Desmarchelier hinted would be offered on the next-gen Micra. 

V2G effectively allows cars to become energy storage devices when plugged into the grid, so they could be charged at times when renewable energy is prevalent and demand is low, and then at times of peak demand the electricity in them could be sold back to the grid. That is beneficial to the grid infrastructure, and Nissan estimates it could reduce annual charging costs by up to 50% – while also reducing the CO2 emissions produced by charging by 30%.

According to Nissan, the new bi-directional wallbox required to feed electricity back to the grid will cost around the same as a current standard mono-directional unit.

EV motors run on DC electricity, while grid electricity runs on AC. To cope with that, EVs now feature on-board converters that switch the electricity fed into a vehicle when charging from AC to DC so that it can be used to power the motor. 

Nissan’s system effectively allows the car’s on-board system to reverse that process, so that it can turn stored DC energy back into AC, allowing it to be fed back to the grid through a specially developed wallbox.

The new system builds on 40 V2G trial projects that Nissan has run with specially converted Leaf and Ariya EVs in multiple countries in recent years. The new wallbox and on-board unit has been tested on a specially modified Ariya in a trial using the University of Nottingham’s Creative Energy Homes project.

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V2G charging has been cited by the government as being key to managing future energy demand and usage in the UK, and Nissan’s announcement has been welcomed by Lilian Greenwood, the  minister for the future of roads. She said: “A greener transport network is a key priority for this government, and by working together we will boost consumer confidence and achieve our shared goal of getting more EVs on the road.”

The UK will be the first country that the service will be offered in, but Nissan is aiming to expand it to other markets afterwards.

The V2G service feeds into Nissan’s wider plan to achieve or exceed cost parity between EVs and combustion-engined cars by 2030, and in its goal to become fully carbon neutral by 2050.

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James Attwood

James Attwood, digital editor
Title: Acting magazine editor

James is Autocar's acting magazine editor. Having served in that role since June 2023, he is in charge of the day-to-day running of the world's oldest car magazine, and regularly interviews some of the biggest names in the industry to secure news and features, such as his world exclusive look into production of Volkswagen currywurst. Really.

Before first joining Autocar in 2017, James spent more than a decade in motorsport journalist, working on Autosport, autosport.com, F1 Racing and Motorsport News, covering everything from club rallying to top-level international events. He also spent 18 months running Move Electric, Haymarket's e-mobility title, where he developed knowledge of the e-bike and e-scooter markets. 

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LP in Brighton 10 October 2024
We’ve been hearing about vehicle to grid and vehicle to home for at least a decade, but nothing seems to happen - except maybe the odd (very)limited trials. I have made some enquiries about this recently and the only vehicle which seems suitable is the original Leaf, and even then a prohibitively expensive and currently unavailable bi-directional charger is needed which most likely isn’t approved by our authorities. The idea is great in principle and it might sway me to buy an EV knowing that it would have a second purpose when it is not being used.
In the meantime the Tesla Powerwall seems like a better bet for those who want something which works now. Still, I look forward to reading about another inconclusive trial available to a few privileged fleet customers…
HiPo 289 10 October 2024

This is great. It's a feature of EVs that take them into a whole new area of energy management and grid balancing.  Things that a combustion car could never compete with.  Currently EV drivers in the US are using Rivians and Ford F150 Lightnings to power their homes during blackouts and this Nissan technology offers even greater potential, for thousands of connected EVs to reduce load on the grid. 

405line 10 October 2024

Most modern EV motors work on 3 phase A.C not D.C. V2G is one of those things that is likely not to happen, like the mini CD format.

idiotgap 10 October 2024

V2G does exist, we've had one of the trial units working with a nissan leaf at home since 2019. The motor may be AC, but the energy is stored DC in the battery and it's with this that the bidrectional charger interacts.