China Daily

Sino-Egyptian manufactur­ing deals signed at Ningxia event

Chinese automakers to help partners dominate regional market, lower costs

- By haoyan@chinadaily.com.cn

The China-Arab States Auto Cooperatio­n Conference witnessed the signing of two Sino-Egyptian agreements that aim to shift the two countries’ automotive cooperatio­n toward localizati­on, as part of the growing network of internatio­nal ties along the Belt and Road.

The China Council for the Promotion of Internatio­nal Trade, Automotive Industry Committee and Egypt’s Holding Company for Maritime and Land Transport inked the deals relating to deepening SinoEgypti­an links in the automotive industry.

“Chinese auto exports are recovering after years of decline, with Egypt being one of the biggest export destinatio­ns among the Arab states since 2015,” said Wang Xia, chairman of the Automotive Industry Committee of the China Council for the Promotion of Internatio­nal Trade, in his speech on Thursday at the conference held in the Ningxia Hui autonomous region.

Mohamed Youssef, chairman of the Holding Company for Maritime and Land Transport, said: “We are going to seal the deal on the production of a total of 900 vehicles a month, with an expectatio­n to leverage Chinese automakers’ experience in assembling and machinery.”

Youssef announced that the organizati­on’s next critical target is to secure agreements on tractors and bulldozers with Chinese partners in 2018.

Egypt has a huge domestic market that could consume a large amount of China-made vehicles, because the products suit local demand, offering lower prices and economic fuel consumptio­n, according to Egyptian Trade and Industry Minister Tarek Kabil.

He said Egypt’s multi-million-dollar automotive market is growing.

According to Kabil, Egypt’s developmen­t strategy is to focus on local car manufactur­ing in a bid to conquer its neighborin­g markets — for example Turkey — thanks to its lower production costs, said Kabil.

The current Sino-Egyptian cooperatio­n agreement is in line with this strategy, as Chinese automakers have shifted their business model away from shipping low-price finished vehicles, toward joint initiative­s such as manufactur­ing locally and co-investing in distributi­on channels, according

Wang Xia, chairman of the Automotive Industry Committee of the China Council for the Promotion of Internatio­nal Trade

to Wang. SAIC-GM-Wuling Automobile, BAIC Group, Changan Automobile, Sinotruk Group, King Long United Automotive Industry, JAC Motors, and Chongqing Sokon Industry Group were among the top Chinese auto exporters to Arab markets in the first seven months of this year, according to data from CCPIT-Auto. The auto committee said that, as of 2016, Sudan and Tunis have emerged as the third and fourth most significan­t longterm auto export destinatio­ns among the Arab states, following Egypt and Saudi Arabia, with Djibouti coming in at fifth. Challenges ahead

The speakers at the conference commented on the challenges Chinese automakers face in the Arab markets, where policy changes could have a significan­t influence on projects.

“Chinese automakers need to conduct thorough research into the legal framework of the target markets to secure legitimacy while lowering legal risks,” said Qiu Yiqing, deputy general manager of Geely.

Luo Zengmiao, general manager of BV-VEO Standards Technical, said there were many detailed issues for Chinese carmakers to examine.

He gave the example: “Many Arab states treat a model with minor changes as a new model, so Chinese auto exporters will have to file new paperwork for those new models.

“If customs were to block products because of a lack of new model documentat­ion, the company would have to spend months making the relevant applicatio­ns, leaving those products with only minor upgrades stuck in storage.”

The auto cooperatio­n conference was organized by CCPITAuto as part of the China-Arab States Expo. It brought together Chinese and Arab automobile and transporta­tion leaders in Yinchuan, capital of Ningxia, along with government representa­tives and academics.

The entire expo assembled executives from more than 1,000 companies and nearly 5,000 exhibitors from 31 industries.

The expo has been held three times since 2013, the year the Belt and Road Initiative was first proposed.

At the junction of the Belt and Road that spans across Eurasia, Arab countries are eager to revitalize the ancient trade routes, according to Egyptian Trade and Industry Minister Kabil.

Six Arab states have signed agreements with China relating to Belt and Road projects, and seven are founding members of the Asian Infrastruc­ture Investment Bank.

The Belt and Road Initiative, which refers to the Silk Road Economic Belt and the 21st Century Maritime Silk Road, has made landlocked Ningxia the frontier for opening-up and taking the lead in economic cooperatio­n with Arab countries.

Chinese auto exports are recovering after years of decline, with Egypt being one of the biggest export destinatio­ns...”

 ?? HAO YAN / CHINA DAILY ?? Visitors look at a Chinese-branded vehicle displayed at the China-Arab States Expo on Sept 7 in Yinchuan, capital of Ningxia Hui autonomous region.
HAO YAN / CHINA DAILY Visitors look at a Chinese-branded vehicle displayed at the China-Arab States Expo on Sept 7 in Yinchuan, capital of Ningxia Hui autonomous region.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Hong Kong