Toyota to Manufacture Camry Hybrids in Australia
TOKYO, Japan --- Toyota Motor Corp. plans to start manufacturing hybrid cars in Australia as early as 2010, according to a report from Reuters.
TOKYO, Japan --- Toyota Motor Corp. plans to start manufacturing hybrid cars in Australia as early as 2010, according to a report from Reuters. The automaker hopes to reach its global annual sales goal of 1 million hybrid vehicles soon after 2010.
Toyota's goal is to assemble a few thousand Camry hybrids a year at the 150,000 unit-a-year Altona factory in Victoria. This is the plant where Toyota already builds the Camry sedan and the Aurion sister model. The Camry hybrids will be sold locally.
Australian Prime Minister Kevin Rudd is scheduled to hold a news conference on Tuesday with Toyota President Katsuaki Watanabe. His government has allocated A$500 million towards the Green Car Innovation Fund to spur development of low-emissions vehicles.
Toyota now builds most of its hybrid vehicles in Japan. In 2006, the automaker began assembling the Prius hybrid in China, and more recently the Camry hybrid at its Kentucky plant in the U.S., with imported hybrid system modules, Reuters reported.
In light of sky-high fuel prices, automakers are scrambling to offer more fuel-efficient alternatives such as pure electric cars and ethanol-fueled cars.
Toyota will need to more than double production of hybrid vehicles in order to meet its 1 million hybrid annual sales target in the early part of the next decade, Reuters reported.
More Fuel

June Fuel Update: Prices Continue to Fall
While prices have continued to decline for four straight weeks, the next weeks don't look as promising.
Read More →
Study: How 2026's Gas Price Hikes Affect Different Vehicle Types
New data from iSeeCars reveals how rising fuel costs have affected different vehicle segments as gasoline prices climbed nearly 46% over the past four months.
Read More →Are You Tracking Your Fleet's True Total Cost of Ownership?
Bobit Business Media surveyed 190 fleet professionals and found that while most fleets are tracking costs, fragmented systems and data gaps are keeping true TCO visibility out of reach. With rising pressure to control spend in an increasingly volatile environment, the gap between what fleets think they know and what the data actually shows is wider than you might expect. See how your peers are managing costs today and where the industry still has room to improve.
Read More →
May Fuel Update: All Regions Experience Declines
Gas prices are finally easing in much of the country, but experts warn global tensions could quickly reverse the trend as the national average remains well above last month’s levels.
Read More →
April Fuel Update: Prices Climb Above $4 as Spring Surge Accelerates
National average jumps to $4.04 per gallon, up sharply from last year, with West Coast prices topping $5 and further increases expected amid rising oil tensions.
Read More →
Tips from Fleet Managers on Saving Fuel Costs
Fleet leaders share practical strategies to reduce fuel spend through smarter policy, routing, and driver guidance.
Read More →
March Fuel Update: Prices Settle With a $4 Average
Fuel prices significantly slowed this week, but a $4 national average is still expected.
Read More →Bob Adamsky on Fuel Volatility: “Don’t Panic — Have a Plan”
With oil prices rising again, AWP Safety’s fleet manager shares how to respond to rising fuel costs and how the right strategy can turn fuel spikes into cost-saving opportunities.
Read More →
Oil Market Turbulence Is Complicating Fleet Cost Planning
Rapid swings in crude oil prices driven by the conflict in the Middle East could create longer-term cost pressures for fleets, affecting fuel prices, supply chains, and vehicle strategy, says NTEA’s Andrew Wrobel.
Read More →
February Fuel Update: Prices Inch Higher for Third Week in a Row
The final February fuel update reveals prices continuing to inch higher for the third week in a row.
Read More →