"It is obviously clear that everyone would benefit if there was a far more simple way for everyone to charge their cars," the financial daily quoted an unnamed executive as saying.
The world's biggest electric-car manufacturer, Nissan, along with rivals BMW and Tesla, together account for about 80 percent of the world's battery-run electric car sales, the newspaper said.
A spokesman for Germany's BMW told AFP that executives had met with Telsa for discussions, but declined to give further details.
Nissan declined to comment on the talks, with a spokesman for the group in Tokyo saying simply it would "welcomes any initiative to boost the number of electric vehicles".
Tesla last week took the rare step of agreeing to share its patents in the hope of increasing global production of electric cars.
Growth in the embryonic industry has been held back as electric cars are often more expensive than vehicles that run on fossil fuels, along with a lack of charging stations and any industry standards for the technology.
