Shanghai Daily

BMW sees China as its NEV future

- AUTO (AP)

GERMAN automaker BMW is taking a majority stake in its China joint venture and investing 3 billion euros (US$3.5 billion) in factories there, underscori­ng the importance of the Chinese market as the company prepares to meet increased demand for electric vehicles.

Munich-based BMW said yesterday it would pay 3.6 billion euros (US$4.2 billion) to raise its stake in BMW Brilliance Automotive Ltd to 75 percent from 50 percent.

“BMW is the first beneficiar­y of the Chinese government’s relaxation of restrictio­ns on foreign investment in the auto industry,” Chinese Premier Li Keqiang told BMW Chairman Harald Krueger at a meeting on Wednesday, according to a government transcript.

“This shows China’s promotion of reform and opening is not just ‘in words,’ but firmly ‘in action.’”

Alongside the deal, BMW will invest in new and existing plant facilities in Shenyang, increasing production capacity to 650,000 vehicles a year from the early 2020s. The plants produced 400,000 vehicles last year.

A new plant will be able to produce fully electric, partly electric, and convention­al vehicles on the same line.

The Chinese government has issued a new energy vehicle mandate which uses a system of credits to push automakers to increase the share of batteryonl­y and hybrid cars in their sales mix. The policy is expected to increase the number of electrical­ly powered vehicles in the world’s largest car market in coming years. Last year, battery-only and hybrid cars were 2.2 percent of the Chinese market; the Internatio­nal Council on Clean Transporta­tion estimates that could rise to around 4 percent by 2020 under the policy.

The country is BMW’s single largest sales market, with 560,000 vehicles sold there last year.

The deal is subject to approval by regulators and shareholde­rs of Chinese partner Brilliance China Automotive Holdings Ltd.

BMW is taking advantage of the Chinese government’s plans to end the requiremen­t that foreign auto manufactur­ers enter into joint ventures with local partners in order to make cars in China. The BMW-Brilliance deal is scheduled to close in 2022, the year the requiremen­t ends.

 ??  ?? Harald Krueger (center right), BMW Chief Executive, and Chen Qiufa, Communist Party Secretary of Liaoning Province (center left) attend a ground breaking ceremony for a new assembly plant, inside the BMW Brilliance Plant Tiexi, in Shenyang yesterday. — Reuters
Harald Krueger (center right), BMW Chief Executive, and Chen Qiufa, Communist Party Secretary of Liaoning Province (center left) attend a ground breaking ceremony for a new assembly plant, inside the BMW Brilliance Plant Tiexi, in Shenyang yesterday. — Reuters

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