Nissan will make a decision next month on whether to produce the next Qashqai SUV model at its Sunderland plant in Britain following the country's decision to leave the European Union, its chief executive Carlos Ghosn said.
Carlos Ghosn last week met with British Prime Minister Theresa May after warning the country's decision to exit the European Union could halt investment at the plant in England.
The factory builds the popular Qashqai SUV and many other models exported throughout Europe.
It is Britain's largest car plant, producing 475,000 vehicles last year, of which 80% were exported.
"We're not asking for any advantage (from the British government), but we don't want to lose any competitiveness no matter what the discussions," Ghosn told reporters at Nissan's company headquarters in Yokohama.
Ghosn said he had received reassurance that the British government would be "extremely cautious" in "preserving the competitiveness" of the Sunderland plant.
"As long as I have this guarantee ... I can look at the future of Sunderland with more ease," he said.
Production of the next Qashqai model is expected to begin around 2018 or 2019.
The time it takes to bring a new car into production means Nissan needs to decide on the location of its next-generation model soon.
Businesses have been concerned that Britain is headed towards a "hard Brexit", which would leave it outside the single market and facing tariffs of up to 10% on car exports.
Ghosn also said he expected the bulk of Nissan's initial cost savings from its partnership with Mitsubishi Motors to come from purchasing and engineering, as Nissan benefits from Mitsubishi's localised supplier network in Asia and uses the smaller automaker's technology for plug-in hybrid vehicles.
Nissan this week completed a deal to take a controlling stake in Mitsubishi, retaining the embattled car maker's chief executive in a bid to help it recover from a mileage cheating scandal.