China Daily Global Edition (USA)

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LOS ANGELES — “I started out on the line just a year ago as an hourly worker, same as everybody else,” said Kris Esposito, the newly minted production manager of the bus chassis section of China’s new BYD electric bus factory in Lancaster, California.

“But BYD rewards you for hard work and using your initiative. The opportunit­ies for advancemen­t here are excellent,” he told Xinhua News Agency in an interview recently.

Esposito, a young thirtysome­thing father of two, had heard that a Chinese electric vehicle company, BYD, was opening a factory in California to manufactur­e electric buses and was hiring hundreds of people in the Lancaster area.

In an exclusive interview with Xinhua recently, Lancaster’s Mayor R. Rex Parris, revealed, “We were facing the highest unemployme­nt rate since the Great Depression. But since BYD chose to build their plant in Lancaster, we have 100 percent employment. That was a lifesaver to our community.”

After Esposito applied and landed a base-level assemblyli­ne position at BYD, he left his job as a security consultant traveling the globe on assignment, to move to the high desert in Antelope Valley with his homemaker wife to set down roots for his growing family.

“I’ll feel blessed. My wife doesn’t have to work, and gets to stay at home to take care of our 3-year-old son and 9-month-old daughter instead of having to put them in day care,” Esposito told Xinhua.

Esposito’s military background is evident from his posture and the respect he shows his co-workers. The focused discipline that the Chinese automotive manufactur­er offers appeals to Esposito’s military training, as do the prospects for career advancemen­t for him and his team.

He explained how he motivates the four supervisor­s and 92 employees who work under him to excel at their jobs.

“I treat them like family. There is so much potential for all these guys. They can look at me and say, he moved up to management in under a year — I can do that too.”

This appreciati­on was echoed by Peter Balin, a testline specialist lead, who used to work with his father in a small, family-run tire business. With other jobs scarce, he came to BYD looking for a fresh start when his father retired and closed the company.

“I started here as a bus driver just looking for a place I could grow into. Now, I’ve been promoted to work as a specialist lead, working directly under the testing supervisor, and my son works for the company too,” he added proudly.

But combining US and Chinese management and working styles to create a smoothly run business is not without its challenges.

“The cultures are pretty different, so there was a real period of adjustment in the beginning on how to mesh those different systems together,” David Ramirez, head of the “Sparks and Arcs” welding section and overseer of four supervisor­s and 97 employees, told Xinhua.

“But we worked through that. The salary and benefits here are comparable to US companies, our relations with the unions are good, and real promotion opportunit­ies are there,” he added.

BYD is also leading the way in diversity. It is beefing up hires of women on the line and has African-American, German, Puerto Rican, Canadian, Armenian, Mexican, Arabic and Haitian employees, and lots of multigener­ational Americans, too.

The list goes on, fueled by BYD’s commitment to open its doors to people of any ethnicity who are willing to work hard and learn what it takes to help the company lead the electric vehicle industry in technical innovation.

That innovation has its challenges. Ramirez, who has been in the automotive industry for more than 17 years, confessed, “It’s crazy how fast this company moves. For example, we build 22 buses, but by the time we get to bus number 22, there are new things in there that make bus number 1 look antiquated.”

In response to the increasing­ly serious environmen­tal impact of global climate change, US states like California and countries like China are proactivel­y mandating the adoption of electric vehicles in municipal bus fleets and the consumer market, too.

California has mandated to have four million electric cars and municipal bus fleets on the road by 2030, while China has mandated that there be seven times the current number of electric cars by 2025 and is actively contemplat­ing a complete ban on fossil fuel vehicles in the not too distant future.

This is creating an economic boom for electric vehicles that BYD has been quick to exploit. Founded in 1995 as a rechargeab­le battery maker, BYD started to make cars in 2003, expanded into electric car manufactur­ing around 2006 and launched the world’s first plug-in hybrid vehicle in 2008. BYD raced up the ranks to become the sales champion in the global EV market for three years in a row, from 2015 to 2017.

Their out-of-the-gate success prompted US billionair­e Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway to buy shares in the company and it now owns a roughly 8.2 percent stake of BYD.

Samsung and Daimler (Mercedes-Benz) also opted to invest heavily, betting on BYD’s ability to lead the pack in the global electric vehicle market, as it already does in China.

Recognizin­g that locating a Chinese company in the US and providing well-compensate­d employment for a growing number of US workers would be a win-win business model for both the US and China, BYD opted to set up shop in Lancaster, a small desert city an hour north of Los Angeles, bringing jobs and prosperity with them.

“The more Chinese companies build plants in the US, the more things get better,” Parris said. “But they face obstacles to doing business here that local officials have to help them navigate. We were able to be a full partner to BYD and help them through the maze of US laws and regulation­s.”

BYD now is one of the largest electric bus manufactur­ers in the US.

With big deals already underway in Los Angeles, Las Vegas and Denver, that goal may be closer than anticipate­d. After expanding their bus division in under a year from 300 to 800 employees, BYD has yet to apply the brakes.

“The more entwined the US becomes with China, the safer the world becomes and the more prosperous the world becomes,” Parris said.

As other companies gear up to compete with BYD for the next generation of electrical vehicles, the race is on.

 ?? BLOOMBERG ?? Employees manufactur­e electric vehicles at the BYD Coach and Bus factory in Lancaster, California.
BLOOMBERG Employees manufactur­e electric vehicles at the BYD Coach and Bus factory in Lancaster, California.

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