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The Toyota Mirai (Japanese: トヨタ・MIRAI, Hepburn: Toyota Mirai) (from mirai (未来), Japanese for 'future') is a mid-size hydrogen fuel cell vehicle (FCV) manufactured by Toyota, and is the first FCV to be mass-produced and sold commercially.
Toyota Mirai (JPD10) Toyota Mirai (JPD20) 2015-2020 2020–present: Marketed mainly in Japan, California, and Europe. As of November 2021, global sales topped 17,600 units since inception. [1] Hyundai Nexo: 2018–2025(present) Marketed in South Korea, California, and Europe. Honda CR-V e:FCEV: 2024–present
Toyota launched the world's first dedicated mass-produced fuel cell vehicle (FCV), the Mirai, in Japan at the end of 2014 [4] [5] [6] and began sales in California, mainly the Los Angeles area and also in selected markets in Europe, the UK, Germany and Denmark [44] later in 2015. [45]
Sales of the Toyota Mirai to customers began in Japan in December 2014. [44] Pricing started at ¥6,700,000 (~ US$57,400) before taxes and a government incentive of ¥2,000,000 (~ US$19,600). [45] Former European Parliament President Pat Cox estimated that Toyota initially would lose about $100,000 on each Mirai sold. [46]
2003–present Toyota Crown Royal Saloon; 2006–2007 Lexus GS300; 2007–present Lexus GS350; JZS Platform (1JZ, 2JZ engine) 1991–2006 Toyota Aristo; 1988.5–2004 Toyota Crown Athlete; 1989–1999 Toyota Crown Royal; 1993–2005 Lexus GS300; UZS Platform (1UZ, 3UZ engines) 1989.5–1999, 2001–2012 Toyota Crown Majesta; 1991.5–2006 ...
Fuel cell hybrid vehicle, entered production as the Toyota Mirai: Toyota FCV Plus: 2015 Fuel cell hybrid vehicle Toyota FCX-80: 1979 Also shown as the CX-80: Toyota Fine-Comfort Ride: 2017 Toyota Fine-N: 2003 Toyota Fine-S: 2003 Toyota Fine-T: 2005 Called the Fine-X in America Toyota Fine-X: 2005 Called the Fine-T in Japan and Europe Toyota FLV ...
The Toyota FC Bus is a transit bus with an electric motor powered by hydrogen fuel cells produced by Toyota, developed in cooperation with Hino Motors. The bus uses components originally developed for the Toyota Mirai , a mid-size fuel cell sedan.
This page was last edited on 17 December 2020, at 08:46 (UTC).; Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License; additional terms may apply.