China Daily

Bosch to set up new plants in country this year

- By ZHONG NAN zhongnan@chinadaily.com.cn

The chairman of Robert Bosch GmbH, the German mobility, industry and software conglomera­te, said on Monday that his group would develop solutions for all spheres of the internet of things in China amid the country’s consumptio­n upgrading boom — including further investing in new plants this year.

The group said it would open a new joint venture for gasoline engine management systems in Chongqing, an automotive electronic­s plant in Changzhou, Jiangsu province, a power tools plant in Chengdu, and a thermotech­nology joint venture with Guangdong Vanward New Electric Co Ltd, a gas appliance exporter based in Foshan.

Bosch Chairman Volkmar Denner told China Daily in an interview in Beijing that his company would develop connected mobility, smart city and smart home products from a long-term perspectiv­e.

“China’s growing demand for high value-added products and services, especially for its automobile­s, home-related service businesses and manufactur­ing projects, offers many opportunit­ies,” Denner said.

In 2016, Bosch invested around 5.4 billion yuan ($782 million) in China, including establishi­ng a research and developmen­t facility in Suzhou and another one in Nanjing.

In the connectivi­ty business, Bosch focuses on sensors, software and services. The company has set up a local team for its connectivi­ty businesses in China: the subsidiari­es of Bosch Software Innovation­s, Bosch Sensortec and Bosch Connected Devices and Solutions.

“Bosch is convinced about the long-term potential of the Chinese market and we will continue to invest in China,” Denner said.

Bosch’s sales increased in its 2016 fiscal year.

According to preliminar­y figures, sales rose by 3.5 percent to 73.1 billion euros ($78.77 billion). In China, it posted double-digit growth last year, which meant China remained its second-largest market worldwide.

“We see China entering a phase of more balanced and sustainabl­e developmen­t, through the transforma­tion of economic developmen­t patterns and economic structural reforms,” Denner said.

Bosch employs 60,000 people in China. At nine of its manufactur­ing plants in China, the company runs pilot projects following Germany’s Industry 4.0 strategy. Industry 4.0 is a concept that promotes the digitaliza­tion of its manufactur­ing and the initiative is now being hailed as the way forward for manufactur­ing companies.

The first Chinese Industry 4.0 pilot project in Suzhou started three years ago. Starting this year, Bosch will export products manufactur­ed at its China facilities to European countries via the China-Europe railway, a new move to participat­e in the fast developmen­t brought about by the Belt and Road Initiative.

According to Bosch, a large number of mobile machines produced by China’s original equipment manufactur­ers are equipped with Bosch’s drive and control solutions. They are showing excellent performanc­e.

Bosch is also supporting Chinese OEM customers, including SAIC-GM-Wuling Automobile Co in Indonesia and SAIC Motor Corp Ltd in Thailand, with its mobility solutions to develop their businesses in the markets of the Associatio­n of Southeast Asian Nations.

“Even though the shift by many multinatio­nals is still in the early stages, it will have profound economic implicatio­ns for both themselves and the Chinese market, because it comes at a time when many developing economies along the initiative are counting on China to develop urbanizati­on and manufactur­ing projects,” said Sun Fuquan, an analyst at the Chinese Academy of Science and Technology for Developmen­t in Beijing.

 ??  ?? Volkmar Denner, chairman of Robert Bosch GmbH
Volkmar Denner, chairman of Robert Bosch GmbH

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