Nissan Motor Co said it was considering expanding its line-up of hybrids, seeking to catch-up with rivals Toyota and Honda whose fuel-sipping cars are surging in popularity.

Japan’s third largest automaker may add its own hybrid technology to small and mid-sized vehicles in addition to the planned launch of a luxury version, a company official told AFP on condition of anonymity.

“It will be a waste to limit our self-developed hybrid system to just one model. It’s only natural to expand the system to our other models,” he said.

“Sales of hybrids are strong, and if we only have luxury hybrids, our market will become narrow,” he added.

Nissan is slated to launch late next year a hybrid version of its Fuga sedan — sold as the Infinity M in the United States — that is equipped with lithium-ion batteries, the official said.

Japan’s Nikkei business daily reported that the smaller hybrids will be introduced in the carmaker’s best-selling Serena minivans and will be on sale in Japan as early as 2011. The Nissan official declined to offer details.

The automaker until now has concentrated efforts on becoming the leading producer of electric vehicles. It plans to mass-market the zero-emission cars to fleet customers in Japan and the US in late 2010.

Nissan halted the development of hybrids in 2002 during a business slump, signing a licensing agreement with Toyota, which supplied its hybrid technology for Nissan’s Altima sedan, available in the US since 2006.

Its renewed hybrid push comes as demand for hybrids grows in Japan, helped by remodelled versions and government tax incentives.

Toyota’s third-generation Prius hybrid was the best selling car in Japan for a second straight month in June. Rival Honda’s revamped Insight, launched in February, took the top spot in April.

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