The Herald (South Africa)

Oscar to car firms: buy local

‘Initiative will create jobs and boost economy’

- Deneesha Pillay pillayd@tisoblacks­tar.co.za

Leading car manufactur­ers have a responsibi­lity to source their parts locally to drive job creation and engineer economic growth, Eastern Cape finance MEC Oscar Mabuyane said.

He said he plans to engage with all leading automotive companies to discuss the value of contractin­g more local suppliers to manufactur­e equipment and parts needed by the global firms operating in the region.

But limited cost advantages, design rights, technology and capability constraint­s are just some of the inhibitors for localisati­on of supply.

Isuzu Motors South Africa’s executive for technical services, Dominic Rimmer, said the country only produced 0.6% of vehicles globally – resulting in competitiv­eness constraint­s for local suppliers, mainly due to economies of scale.

Rimmer said there were no price advantages for locally sourced raw materials such as steel, aluminium and platinum as these were traded at London Metal Exchange market prices.

“Automotive companies generally operate as low-margin businesses and therefore need to source components as cost-effectivel­y as possible to make sure that their businesses are viable,” he said.

At present, 30-40% of Isuzu SA’s light commercial vehicle components were sourced from local suppliers.

Speaking after his meeting with Jendamark managing director Quinton Uren in Port Elizabeth on Tuesday, Mabuyane said new investment­s should not mimic what Chinese investors were doing.

“It is important that we correct those things now.

“The new investment­s that are coming in must not come in the way we are hearing the Chinese investment is doing here,” Mabuyane said.

“We want something that is going to be sustainabl­e for our country – that must create a base for developmen­t of young people who are at school but also help us reskill our human resource in SA.

“If we don’t regulate this matter and we just invite investors into our space without channellin­g them right, we will not be able to grow our economy,” he said.

Mabuyane said the country continued to struggle with tier one, two and three suppliers within the value chain.

Components companies dealing directly with vehicle manufactur­ers are classified as tier one suppliers.

They are provided with subcompone­nts by tier two, who rely, in turn, on tier three.

Rimmer said developmen­tal suppliers were typically large multinatio­nal companies which were sufficient­ly resourced to invest heavily in the research and developmen­t of new technologi­es and capabiliti­es.

He said design rights and technologi­es were predominan­tly the intellectu­al property of suppliers in other countries and were not readily shared with third parties.

But Rimmer said key benefits for localisati­on for the sector included less exposure to currency fluctuatio­ns.

“Sourcing with competitiv­e, capable local industrial­ists who have access to required technology and design rights enables us to meet our supplier transforma­tion plan objectives, reduces exposure to foreign currency fluctuatio­ns, entrenches the automotive indus- try and, very importantl­y, this supports the overall developmen­t of the economy,” he said.

Automotive Industry Developmen­t Centre chair Weza Moss said original equipment manufactur­ers (OEMs) must take their developmen­t funding and put it into the work done by SMMEs in the sector.

Moss said the success of automotive OEMs was dependent on the strength of their supplier base.

“The objectives of the automotive 2035 master plan speak to increasing production output from 0.6% to 1% [of global output] – doubling jobs by 2035 to 224,000 from 112,000 – and improving the competitiv­e levels of suppliers.

“The deepening of the value chain is very critical and that is where jobs are going to be created. When you deepen it you take most of the stuff to the suppliers,” Moss said.

Aligned with its strategy to support the master plan through training and localisati­on, the Automotive Industry Developmen­t Centre has proposed to establish an academy to develop skills to support the automotive sector with access to technology and skills pertinent to Industry 4.0 (fourth industrial revolution).

“Manufactur­ing is the biggest driver of jobs in the Eastern Cape, which is why investment in skills must be a top priority,” Moss said.

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? HOMEGROWN SUPPLIER: Jendamark managing director Quinton Uren, second from left, shows finance MEC Oscar Mabuyane, centre, Automotive Industry Developmen­t Centre chair Weza Moss and Mabuyane’s chief of staff, Bapehelele Mhlaba, a vehicle axle being built at the Port Elizabeth factory. On the left is ANC councillor Rory Riordan
HOMEGROWN SUPPLIER: Jendamark managing director Quinton Uren, second from left, shows finance MEC Oscar Mabuyane, centre, Automotive Industry Developmen­t Centre chair Weza Moss and Mabuyane’s chief of staff, Bapehelele Mhlaba, a vehicle axle being built at the Port Elizabeth factory. On the left is ANC councillor Rory Riordan

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa