Dongfeng is the Chinese partner in many joint ventures that make trucks and cars.
eGT New Energy Automotive On August 29, 2017, the Renault-Nissan Alliance and Dongfeng Motor Corporation announced the establishment of a joint venture, eGT New Energy Automotive Co., Ltd. This joint venture was created for the collaborative development and sale of electric vehicles in China. Renault and Nissan each hold a 25% stake in eGT, while Dongfeng owns the remaining 50% of the shares. eGT has established its production facility in Shiyan City, Hubei Province, located in the central region of China. The joint venture shares the production line and supply chain with
Dongfeng Nammi and produces the electric city car targeted at European market. Its main products, the Renault Group's
Renault City K-ZE/
Dacia Spring,
Seres Group's
Fengon E1 and Nissan's Vanucia E30 (second generation) are rebadged by Dongfeng's Nano Box and EX1 city car. File:Renault City K-ZE IMG001.jpg|
Renault City K-ZE File:Dacia Spring IAA 2021 1X7A0215.jpg|
Dacia Spring File:Venucia e30 001.jpg|link=|
Nissan Venucia e30 Dana Dongfeng established its joint venture with American parts-maker
Dana Holding Corporation, Dongfeng Dana Axle Co, 2005. Dana and Dongfeng both have 50% ownership of this joint venture.
Dongfeng Commercial Vehicles (Dongfeng Trucks) File:Dongfeng truck of China Post QY-030 20091021.jpg|A Dongfeng truck File:Dongfeng KM6603PA at China-Lao Border.jpg|A Dongfeng KM6603PA bus File:Dongfeng Hubei 4x2 Fire Engine.jpg|Dongfeng Hubei 4x2 fire engine in the Philippines In January 2013, Dongfeng and
Volvo agreed to form a China-based medium- and heavy-duty truck manufacturing joint venture, Dongfeng Commercial Vehicles, with 55% ownership by Dongfeng Motor and 45% by Volvo. As part of the transaction, Volvo will pay 5.6 billion yuan (US$900 million) to Dongfeng, which will pay Nissan Motors to replace it with Volvo in an existing commercial vehicle joint venture. and it is possible this location was one asset of the former Nissan joint venture Dongfeng bought out as part of the Volvo deal. and manufactures Honda-branded
SUVs and automobiles for the Chinese market. include the
Honda Civic, As of early 2011, some offerings may incorporate Japanese-made parts. In 2010, its model line included what was China's best-selling SUV that year, the CR-V. Other Honda-branded models sold in China are made by
Guangqi Honda Automobile, but a 2004 agreement allowed Dongfeng-built CR-Vs to be sold through Guangqi's
showrooms. A China-only product line debuted in 2016 with the Gienia, a mid-size hatchback. Primary production may be at its two
Wuhan, Hubei, production sites, one of which became operational c. 2012. Another plant produces engines for this joint venture in
Guangzhou. When the Chinese State began allowing foreign automakers market access through joint ventures, Nissan remained with Dongfeng. As an example of the extensive and comprehensive nature of Nissan's technical assistance to the Chinese company, in 2011 nearly 70% of products Dongfeng manufactured were connected in some way to Nissan. File:NISSAN PATHFINDER (R53) China (6).jpg|Nissan Pathfinder File:NISSAN QASHQAI (J12) China.jpg|Nissan Qashqai File:NISSAN X-TRAIL T33 China (8).jpg|Nissan X-Trail
Dongfeng Motor Co., Ltd. (Dongfeng Nissan) Established in 2002, Dongfeng Motor Co., Ltd (DFL) began operating in July 2003. Nissan holds 50% ownership in this maker of heavy trucks, light commercial vehicles, and passenger cars. Heavy-duty trucks and buses exclusively carry the Dongfeng brand name, Venucia (
Qi Chen) launched its first models in 2012. The name is derived from that of the Roman goddess of beauty,
Venus. Infiniti-branded vehicles are most probably imported as of 2006, but 2013 news stories suggested that some production would be moved to China in the future. Manufacture of the brand in China may have begun with the
Q50L being produced at a site in
Xiangyang sometime after 2014. The Venucia marque, launched in September 2010, was originally owned by Dongfeng Nissan Passenger Vehicle, itself another subsidiary of Dongfeng Motor Co., Ltd. File:Venucia V-Online IMG003.jpg|Venucia V-Online File:Venucia Xing 006.jpg|Venucia Star File:Venucia D60 01 China 2018-03-20.jpg|Venucia D60
Fengdu Launched in 2013, Fengdu () is a sub-brand of Dongfeng Automobile started by producing out of production Nissan CUVs bearing the Dongfeng logo. Older Nissan tooling was set up in China by Zhengzhou-Nissan to produce the second generation Nissan
X-Trail rebadged as the
Dongfeng Fengdu MX6. File:Dongfeng Fengdu MX6 01 China 2015-04-08.jpg|Dongfeng Tengshi MX6 File:2017 Dongfeng-Fengdu (Zhengzhou-Nissan) MX5, front 8.5.18.jpg|Dongfeng Fengdu MX5 File:Fengdu MX3 front quarter.jpg|Fengdu MX3
Nissan Import & Export (Guangzhou) The Nissan Import & Export (Guangzhou) is the first joint venture vehicle import and export entity set up by a foreign-funded automotive company in China.
Nissan holds a 60% stake, while
Dongfeng Motor Group holds the remaining 40%. The Dongfeng
Nissan N7 and
Frontier Pro PHEV will be the first models developed locally in China for export to overseas markets.
Other Nissan joint ventures Other joint ventures include Dongfeng Nissan Passenger Vehicle Co, a unit of Dongfeng Motor Company that makes automobiles for the domestic market and has exported to
Egypt. Another unit of Dongfeng Motor Co., Ltd., Zhengzhou Nissan Automobile Co, manufactures light commercial vehicles. Most Zhengzhou products are sold under the Dongfeng brand, such as the
Dongfeng Rich (
Rui Qi), a reworked
Nissan D22.
Nissan joint venture sites A passenger-car production base in
Guangzhou,
Guangdong, are part of both the Nissan joint venture Dongfeng Motor Co Another Guangzhou production base manufactures Nissan engines. As of 2009, a Nissan joint venture engine production base in
Shiyan, Hubei province, produced diesel engines and other sites, auto parts. Production capacity figures may consider engines and vehicles as discrete. A handful of Nissan joint venture production bases are located in
Xiangfan, Hubei, making light commercial vehicles and cars. Currently selling a range of Peugeot and Citroën models, its first offering was a hatchback built from semi-complete
knock-down kits, the
ZX Fukang. Its first Peugeot-branded product was introduced in 2004. Some of the engines made by this joint venture are used in other Dongfeng passenger car products, the Fengshen S30 and H30, for example. the
PSA Peugeot Citroën joint venture had two production bases in
Wuhan,
Xiangfan serves as location for a powertrain production base for the joint venture with
PSA Peugeot Citroën as of 2010. Current products sold under the Skio brand included: •
Dongfeng Skio Junfeng •
Dongfeng Skio ER30 • Dongfeng Skio E11K ==Defunct==