The National - News

AFRICA THE GRAND PRIZE FOR CHINESE CAR MAKERS WITH HOME MARKET SATURATED

▶ The continent offers rich potential, but cheap used cars are a tough challenge.

- Gavin du Venage reports

Chinese car makers have struggled to break into internatio­nal markets against fierce competitio­n from existing players. Now, many are trying to make a go of it in Africa, with mixed success.

With cheerful names such as Geely, Chery, Hafei, Chana and Foton, Chinese auto manufactur­ers are opening up assembly plants all across Africa. For consumers though, it is in Toyota they trust. Rusty used Hilux pick-ups imported from Japan are everywhere. So are second-hand imports of other establishe­d brands such as Volkswagen, Ford and Nissan.

Nigeria alone imports about 150,000 used cars a year, according to PriceWater­house Coopers. These vehicles cost around 10 per cent of a new car and present a formidable market hurdle to companies trying to compete.

“If African countries are serious about industrial­isation, they have to put a stop to the dumping of cheap cars, especially those over five years old,” says Martyn Davies, managing director of Emerging Markets & Africa at Deloitte South Africa.

Mr Davies is working with several African government­s, including Nigeria, helping to devise a policy framework that will stem the flow of cheap used cars. This, he says, will help assemblers open new factories in African countries that will create jobs and skills locally.

Despite the challenges, it’s easy to see why Chinese firms are interested in Africa. The continent is home to more than 1 billion people, and an expanding middle class. Growth of personal transport is low however, with only 42 vehicles per 1,000 inhabitant­s, compared to the global average of 182, according to 2016 data from the Internatio­nal Organisati­on for Motor Vehicle Manufactur­ers.

Currently South Africa is the only country on the continent that has a de facto automotive industry. At least nine major car makers have plants, including Volkswagen, Toyota, BMW and Ford. These compete internatio­nally; for instance, BMW’s factory in Pretoria makes the German firm’s X3 SUV for export to the US market.

Mr Davies says Chinese manufactur­ers have noted the success of South Africa’s industry and are hoping to do the same elsewhere in Africa. For some this has become a matter of survival as China now has more than 100 car companies, all fighting for business in a saturated market.

“They need to grow sales and it’s tough to do so in China where there are so many competitor­s. So they are trying to grow sales offshore,” says Mr Davies.

Over time many of these companies will probably fail or be swallowed up by competitor­s – much the same happened during the early years of the western automotive industry.

For those that hope to survive, Africa is regarded as a crucial market, which is why companies such as Guangzhou Automobile Group (GAC) have opened an assembly plant in Lagos, Nigeria.

“Nigeria, and Africa at large, has the potential to perform well for the automotive industry,” said Yu Jun, general manager of GAC Motors. “We are willing to make the necessary investment­s to ensure our Nigerian customers – and those in the wider region – become familiar with our brand.”

Mr Jun said GAC would for now concentrat­e on developing its brand locally, before expanding beyond Nigeria.

“We’ll first establish ourselves in the Nigerian market, then look to which others offer the best opportunit­y; Ethiopia, Algeria, Egypt, etc.”

For some Chinese companies, it has not been a smooth

Many African countries invite manufactur­ers to set up shop, but it is those in the coastal economies that will prevail

road. Foton, a Beijing manufactur­er that produces pick-up trucks and delivery vehicles, entered Kenya in 2011. By 2017 however, Foton East Africa was broke, forced into bankruptcy and its production plant in Nairobi shut.

Now it is staging a comeback. Earlier this year Foton took control of the Kenyan operation directly, recapitali­sed the business and set out to reopen the production line.

“This is our target market,” says Apple Sun, the new head of Kenya Foton. “We need to be here.”

Perhaps the most ambitious of the African-focused Chinese auto makers is Beijing Automotive Industry Holding Company, better known by its brand name Baic (pronounced “bike”).

This year the company opened an 11 billion rand (Dh3bn) assembly plant in Port Elizabeth on the east coast of South Africa. The Baic facility is said to be China’s largest direct investment in Africa to date, and will create 2,500 jobs. Port Elizabeth is responsibl­e for more than 60 per cent of the country’s automotive manufactur­ing, and the main hub for car exports.

Baic has made it clear it sees the Port Elizabeth plant as a springboar­d to sell its line of 4x4s, passenger cars and luxury sedans across Africa.

Mr Davies of Deloitte notes that while many African countries are inviting manufactur­ers to set up shop, including landlocked states such as Rwanda and Uganda, it is those located in the coastal economies that will prevail. “It is a nice idea to set up a factory in Rwanda, but the costs of exporting or selling those cars will be prohibitiv­e. They need to be close to a port.”

In the meantime, Chinese companies are also learning that what sells in China does not necessaril­y translate into sales in Africa.

Du Rong, deputy manager of Baic Internatio­nal, attended the rolling off of the first vehicle from the company’s Port Elizabeth plant in July. He appeared slightly bemused at the reception Baic cars got from South African consumers.

“South Africans test the Bluetooth and play the music very loud,” he said. “That’s usually the first car feature they try out. They tend not to like the sunroof very much, maybe for security concerns.”

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 ??  ?? Traffic backed up in Lagos, Nigeria, where Guangzhou operates an assembly plant. On the production line at Foton, right, which hopes to recover from bankruptcy
Traffic backed up in Lagos, Nigeria, where Guangzhou operates an assembly plant. On the production line at Foton, right, which hopes to recover from bankruptcy
 ?? Bloomberg ?? Geely’s Borui GE hybrid sedan. Chinese car makers hope to learn the intricacie­s of the African market
Bloomberg Geely’s Borui GE hybrid sedan. Chinese car makers hope to learn the intricacie­s of the African market

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