Located on the south bank of the River Wear, the Sunderland plant is a massive complex that, when fully operational, can build up to 600,000 vehicles annually. It directly employs 6,000 people, and its supply chain employs tens of thousands more throughout northeast England. It produced 273,000 cars in 2025.
Running at less than 50% of installed capacity, that figure largely explains why Nissan and Chinese automaker Chery signed a memorandum of understanding on June 3, 2026, and why the idea of Chinese-branded vehicles coming off a British assembly line has been viewed less as a shock and more as a sensible reaction to a series of circumstances that had been building for some time.
The reasoning is inevitable given Nissan’s position in the world. For fiscal year 2025, the company reported a net loss of 533 billion yen, or about $3.5 billion, marking the second year in a row of large losses. As part of a restructuring program, it has closed seven factories and eliminated 20,000 jobs globally.
Ivan Espinosa, the company’s current CEO, has been clear that the operating environment is expected to remain challenging throughout 2026, with energy costs, the effects of US tariffs, and uneven global demand all weighing on the business. In light of this, an idle production line in Sunderland is a structural liability rather than merely an inefficiency. If the Chery arrangement is finalized, Line One would become a source of income rather than an expenditure, and Nissan would continue to own the facility and its employees.
It’s no coincidence that Chery is eager for this arrangement. The Chinese automaker has been methodically expanding its manufacturing presence throughout the world by partnering or purchasing factories that are no longer able to be filled by established companies. In January 2026, it acquired Nissan’s South Africa facility. Under the Ebro joint venture, it started production at a former Nissan plant in Barcelona. Chery is reportedly one of the bidders for the jointly owned Nissan-Mercedes facility in Mexico.
The pattern is rather obvious: Chery is taking advantage of idle capacity that its rivals are finding difficult to utilize in order to broaden its manufacturing reach. Chery’s Omoda and Jaecoo brands together accounted for 6.7% of UK new car sales in April 2026, more than double Nissan’s own 2.7% share in the same month. Sunderland matches that formula exactly, and the brand’s sales performance in the UK lends it even more urgency. Even in a preliminary discussion, a corporation has significant power if it outsells its factory partner in that factory partner’s home market.
The scholars who study this field are aware of its wider significance. The transaction might make Chery the first significant Chinese automaker to produce passenger cars in the UK on a large scale, according to David Bailey of Birmingham Business School. That milestone is not what the headline implies. It is a change in the structure of who produces what and where in the British automotive sector, not just a manufacturing contract.
The facility has a future-facing investment layer that makes it more appealing than a straightforward capacity issue might imply, thanks to the AESC battery gigafactory next to the Sunderland site and the plant’s preparations for electric Leaf and Juke manufacture.
There are real disclaimers. A reminder that Chinese brands in the UK are still going through growing pains that have nothing to do with production quality but still affect perception is provided by the fact that 33 Jaecoo electric SUVs worth nearly £1 million caught fire at Southampton docks the week the deal was announced. The MoU is expressly non-binding, and the commercial terms have not been agreed upon.

It’s still unclear if Chery and Nissan would finalize a contract by the 2027 fiscal year target. It’s obvious that Sunderland’s vacant assembly line needs something to operate, and a Chinese automaker that is expanding more quickly in the UK market than the Japanese automaker that owns the building is the most likely contender to fill it.
