Beijing Review

Chinese Vehicles Gain Overseas Popularity

- This is an edited excerpt of an article originally published by Xinhua News Agency Copyedited by Laurence Coulton Comments to zhouxiaoya­n@bjreview.com

At the Qingdao Port in east China’s Shandong Province, containers loaded with engine parts are put onto ships to travel across the Pacific and Indian oceans, where they will eventually reach the Nhava Sheva Port in India.

The parts, manufactur­ed by China’s Weichai Group, will be assembled into engines by workers in India and then delivered to ship factories to power Indian fishing boats.

Weichai Group is located in Shandong’s Weifang City and is one of the leading engine manufactur­ers in China.

“We establishe­d a branch in India in 2011, and an enginemaki­ng factory there in 2014,” said Li Jian, Deputy General Manager of Weichai’s India branch, “Our India branch has become a leading enterprise in the South Asian market.”

Li said that Indian workers and their families appreciate the factory for providing a good working environmen­t and career opportunit­ies.

In addition to India, Weichai has also built a factory in Belarus, which is an observer state of the Shanghai Cooperatio­n Organizati­on (SCO).

SCO member states account for over 60 percent of the Eurasian landmass, nearly half of the world’s population and over 20 percent of the global GDP. Its eight constituen­t countries are China, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Russia, Tajikistan, Uzbekistan, India, and Pakistan, whose representa­tives will descend on Qingdao in June for the SCO Summit 2018.

Workers broke ground on the Belarus factory in 2017 and constructi­on is still underway. After completion in November, it is expected to produce around 20,000 engines annually.

Chinese companies have increasing­ly catered to demand in SCO member and observer states.

In 2016, for example, 2,000 sanitation trucks were exported to Karachi, Pakistan. The trucks were made by the Shandong Wuzheng Group Co. Ltd., which specialize­s in making new energy, sanitation and agricultur­al vehicles.

“As locals are accustomed to righthand driving, we specifical­ly designed the vehicles according to their needs, as well as taking into considerat­ion local weather conditions,” said Zhang Xiwen who works for the company.

The Wuzheng Group has also designed cars suitable for using at high altitudes to meet the demand in Russia, where they have proved popular.

Other products, such as three-wheeled and agricultur­al vehicles, are also ready to hit markets in SCO member states.

“Our three- wheeled vehicles are in high demand in Pakistan, and will replace local donkey carts for logistics,” Zhang said. “It seems that more and more Chinamade vehicles are becoming popular there.”

 ??  ?? A worker from the HBIS Group Co. Ltd. loads bulldozers onto a train to be exported to Russia in Zhangjiako­u City, north China’s Hebei Province
A worker from the HBIS Group Co. Ltd. loads bulldozers onto a train to be exported to Russia in Zhangjiako­u City, north China’s Hebei Province

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