Toyota’s CEO-to-be outlines leadership team bullish for EV push

Tokyo — The next president at Japan’s top automaker Toyota Motor Corp., Koji Sato, introduced a management team Monday that he said will lead an aggressive push on electric vehicles.

Sato stressed that “electrification” is a key theme for his team and promised to develop a totally new, next-generation electric vehicle by 2026.

Koji Sato, center, Toyota chief branding officer and CEO-designate, with with his management teams, Kazuaki Shingo, left, chief production officer; Yoichi Miyazaki, second left, executive vice president; CFO Hiroki Nakajima, second right, executive vice president, CTO; and Simon Humphries, right, chief branding officer, during a press conference Monday, Feb. 13, 2023, in Tokyo. Sato, who was appointed the next president at Japan’s top automaker Toyota, introduced a management team Monday that he said will lead an aggressive push on electric vehicles.

That will be a Lexus, while Toyota Motor Corp. will also beef up all of its EV model offerings, Sato said.

“Lexus will lead the move,” he told reporters at a news conference in Tokyo. “I see myself as the captain of the soccer team.”

In a presentation, Sato listed the various executives, each with different responsibilities, such as carbon neutrality and safety technology, as well as overseeing regions like North America and Asia.

Hiroki Nakajima, who oversees mid-size vehicles, was named executive vice president overseeing technology. Yoichi Miyazaki, who has been overseeing business operations, was named chief financial officer.

The selection of Sato, now Toyota’s chief branding officer, as the next chief executive was announced last month. The new leadership takes the helm April 1.

Toyota, which makes the Prius hybrid and Camry sedan, has billed the move as an effort to stay abreast of social changes like electrification. At times, it has been seen as lagging its rivals in EVs.

The company’s success with hybrids, which have both a battery and a gas engine, and hydrogen fuel cells may be partly behind that perception.