Kuwait Times

Volkswagen to invest $2.2bn in Chinese electric vehicle sector

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BEIJING: Volkswagen said it will invest around 2 billion euros ($2.2 billion) in two Chinese companies in the electric vehicle sector, calling it “the world’s biggest market”. The German car giant said it will take a 50 percent stake in JAG—the parent company of state-owned JAC Motors—and increase its holding in the JAC Volkswagen joint venture from 50 percent to 75 percent for around 1 billion euros.

The group said in a statement that “by gaining management control, Volkswagen is paving the way for more electric models and infrastruc­ture”. It will also buy a 26 percent share of Chinese battery supplier Gotion High-Tech for 1.1 billion euros.

China, which accounts for 40 percent of Volkswagen’s sales, has become the world’s largest auto market in recent years, with Beijing repeatedly pledging to support the electric vehicle industry. Volkswagen said it expects to sell around 1.5 million new energy vehicles in the country annually by 2025.

China’s industry ministry said in December the country should seek to ensure one in four of all vehicles sold in 2025 were either hybrids or fully-electric vehicles. And Beijing decided in late March to extend the tax exemption for the purchase of electric vehicles by two years.

Car sales in China began to slide in 2018 and plunged further when the coronaviru­s pandemic paralyzed the economy, but they have rebounded as the country appears to have brought the virus under control.

The JAG investment is the first time the German carmaker will take “a strategic role in a state-owned company”, Volkswagen China CEO Stephan Woellenste­in said in a statement. China typically requires foreign automakers to forge joint ventures with domestic firms when establishi­ng manufactur­ing plants, which means sharing profits and technology with local partners.

But Beijing announced in 2018 that it would end a previous 50 percent cap on foreign auto firms’ ownership of new energy vehicle joint ventures with local companies, while US electric car manufactur­er Tesla opened a wholly-owned Shanghai factory last year.

Volkswagen does not intend to “throw away” its electric car venture with JAC, which launched in 2017, because of the advantage of having a “Chinese partner who understand­s the country”, Woellenste­in told reporters in a conference call Friday.

Car trouble

The lifting of coronaviru­s lockdowns in China has given the stuttering auto industry a jumpstart, with sales rising for the first time in two years as buyers return as the health crisis eases and restrictio­ns on travel and businesses are lifted.

Sales rose 4.4 percent year-on-year in April, according to figures from the China Associatio­n of Automobile Manufactur­ers, driven by strong demand for commercial vehicles, which soared more than 30 percent. Woellenste­in said May sales in the country could meet last year’s level for the same month, and that the carmaker is currently “more optimistic” about the Chinese market’s recovery.

However, the global car industry faces an existentia­l crisis from the coronaviru­s pandemic, which has caused sales to plunge as government­s forced citizens to stay at home to slow the spread of the virus.

The Volkswagen announceme­nt came as French automaker announced 15,000 job losses worldwide, and a day after Japanese automaker Nissan reported a huge $6.2 billion annual net loss. Nissan, already battling weak demand as well as the fallout from the arrest of former boss Carlos Ghosn, said the global outbreak had hit all aspects of its business.

Nissan said it will shut its Barcelona plant and slash production. – AFP

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 ??  ?? DORTMUND: Used cars of German car maker Volkswagen (VW) are for sale at a car dealer in Dortmund, western German.—AFP
DORTMUND: Used cars of German car maker Volkswagen (VW) are for sale at a car dealer in Dortmund, western German.—AFP

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