The Borneo Post

In Tianjin, Toyota preparing to ramp up sales

- By Norihiko Shirouzu, Yilei Sun

BEIJING: Toyota Motor Corp is likely to make 120,000 more cars a year in the Chinese port city of Tianjin as part of a medium-term strategy that’s gathering pace as China- Japan ties improve, said four company insiders with knowledge of the matter.

Toyota’s plan to boost annual production capacity by about a quarter in the port city will lay the foundation to increase sales in China to two million vehicles per year, a jump of over 50 percent, the four sources said.

The Tianjin expansion signals Toyota’s willingnes­s to start adding significan­t manufactur­ing capacity in China with the possibilit­y of one or two new assembly plants in the world’s biggest auto market, the sources said. Car imports could also increase, they said.

The move comes at a time when China’s trade outlook with the United States appears fraught and uncertain.

Toyota plans to significan­tly expand its sales networks and focus more on electric car technologi­es as part of the strategy, the sources said, declining to be identified as they are not authorised to speak to the media.

Toyota sold 1.29 million vehicles in China last year and while sales are projected at 1.4 million this year, “capacity constraint­s” have restricted stronger growth, the sources said.

Toyota’s manufactur­ing hub in Tianjin currently has the capacity to produce 510,000 vehicles a year, while Toyota as a whole, between two joint ventures, has overall capacity to churn out 1.16 million vehicles a year.

According to two Tianjin government websites last week, Toyota has been given regulatory approval by the municipal government’s Developmen­t and Reform Commission to pursue its expansion.

The Tianjin facilities, which produces cars such as the Toyota Corolla and Vios cars, are owned and operated by one of Toyota’s joint ventures in China.

China is sometimes a market difficult to operate for Japanese companies because of historical reasons.

In 2012, cars sold by Toyota and other Japanese carmakers were battered when protests erupted across China after diplomatic spats over disputed islets known as Diaoyu in China and Senkaku in Japan.

Since then, Toyota has emphasised steady growth rather than taking on risky expansion projects.

According to the four sources, Toyota’s attitude toward China began changing markedly after an official visit to Japan by Chinese Premier Li Keqiang in May.

During the visit, Li toured Toyota’s facilities on the northern island of Hokkaido, and was escorted by Toyota’s family scion and chief executive Akio Toyoda.

Toyoda has since sought to boost his company’s presence in China, a vision that had culminated in an active effort to identify specific ways to do just that, according to the four sources.

They said aside from boosting capacity, Toyota is also looking at the possibilit­y to significan­tly expand its distributi­on networks for the mainstream Toyota and premium Lexus brands.

Currently, Toyota has more than 1,300 stores for the Toyota brand and nearly 190 for its Lexus luxury cars.

The timing for the China expansion couldn’t be better.

Earlier this year, Toyota was able to finally launch a couple of much anticipate­d, potentiall­y high-volume subcompact sportutili­ty vehicles ( SUVs) - two China-market versions of the Toyota C-HR crossover SUV which hit showrooms in the United States last year.

The C-HR variants are relatively small crossover SUVs that other manufactur­ers, most notably Japan’s Honda Motor Co, have leveraged to grow sales rapidly and sell more cars in China than its much bigger rival Toyota.

Honda sold 1.44 million vehicles in China last year.

Lexus is also deemed likely to benefit from a windfall from growing trade tensions between China and the United States.

All Lexus cars Toyota sells in China are brought in from Japan and benefit from a much lower tariff rate of 15 per cent levied on non-US produced car imports. — Reuters

Earlier this year, Toyota was able to finally launch a couple of much anticipate­d, potentiall­y high-volume subcompact sport-utility vehicles (SUVs) - two China-market versions of the Toyota C-HR crossover SUV which hit showrooms in the United States last year.

 ??  ?? Checking on newly produced cars at a Toyota factory in Tianjin. — Reuters photo
Checking on newly produced cars at a Toyota factory in Tianjin. — Reuters photo

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