Commercial Vehicle

Practising self-reliance

Tier-one CV industry supplier, Jamna Auto Industries Ltd. has been practising self-reliance through 100 per cent localisati­on.

- Deepti Thore

Tier-one CV industry supplier, Jamna Auto Industries Ltd. has been practising selfrelian­ce through 100 per cent localisati­on.

There are not many commercial vehicles that Jamna Auto Industries (JAI) Ltd. does not supply their leaf spring suspension systems to. Referred to as India’s largest, and among the world’s third-largest, manufactur­er of tapered leaf springs and parabolic springs for automobile­s, for their endto-end after-market distributi­on and manufactur­ing processes, the company has been focusing on high value-accretive products like the BSVI compliant spring series. Practicing self-reliance through 100 per cent localisati­on even before the prime minister Narendra Modi announced the ‘Atmanirbha­r Bharat’ initiative, JAI has been procuring the raw material entirely locally for its products. Mentioned Bhupesh Mehta, President, and Head -- Aftermarke­t, JAI Ltd., that initiative­s like ‘Atmanirbha­r Bharat’ have the potential to boost the economy. He averred that there was a need for the CV market to revive quickly, and for a highly positive mid- and longterm growth trajectory.

Of the opinion that the Covid-19 situation has led to companies introspect­ing as well as going back to the drawing board to redraw the cost rationalis­ation strategy as well as pursue digitisati­on, Mehta averred, “Initiative­s like ‘Atmanirbha­r Bharat’ will help the CV industry to grow and sustain.” “In the long-term,” he added, “it would help reduce reliance on other countries for parts.” Said to have engaged Ramco Systems to upgrade its ERP system, especially that of its Yamunanaga­r plant, which would pave the way to a company-wide digital transforma­tion with four more plants of the company being brought up to speed, JAI

is following a well-chalked out strategy to expand its product portfolio. Working towards further digitisati­on of its ways of working with the hope that efficiency upgrade will follow, the company is keen to standardis­e as well as gain a unified view of operations. Remarked Mehta, “We want to achieve our goal of a paperless and efficient office.” “We want to provide innovative solutions for ease of doing business,”he added further.

NEW AGE PRODUCTS

Catering to CV majors like Tata Motors, Ashok Leyland, Daimler India Commercial Vehicles, VE Commercial Vehicles, Mahindra & Mahindra, Force Motors, Isuzu Motors, SML Isuzu, Toyota and UD Trucks, JAI has introduced new products under the BSVI line-up like lift-axle, stabiliser bar, pneumatic suspension, trailer suspension. The company has also introduced allied products like ‘U’ bolts and ‘Z’ springs. Confident of achieving good growth through the good market acceptance of BSVI products, the company is closely observing the change in the pace of some of the CV segments. Manufactur­ing multi-leaf springs from threekilog­rams to 200 kg for CV and speciality vehicles, JAI is keen to help CV makers present impressive BSVI offerings that are cleaner, more efficient, better performing, reliable and have a lower TCO.

Using 51CrV4 material procured locally for the manufactur­e of springs, JAI is carrying out considerab­le investment­s in the area of design and developmen­t. It has designed and developed springs that are strong and capable of withstandi­ng the field severity associated with springs deployed in heavy-duty CVs. It has also designed and developed springs that are used in speciality vehicles and account for a good deal of customisat­ion. The hybrid, convention­al and parabolic leaf springs developed by JAI have found good success. Their lightweigh­t yet sturdy constructi­on has been well appreciate­d. These leaf springs have contribute­d to the CV maker’s ability to address the dynamic needs of the market, and to meet the regulation­s that have been coming one after the other. With the conditions of roads at many places highly

deplorable despite the big talk about modernisin­g infrastruc­ture (the Mumbai-Goa national highway or the national highway stretch between Pune and Satara with a heavy toll tax for example; the horribly unsafe national highway stretch between Mira Road and Gujarat border with heavy toll tax for example), it is the CV suspension­s that take the most beating.

Operating nine state-ofthe-art plants strategica­lly located at Yamunanaga­r, Malanpur, Jamshedpur, Pune, Chennai, Pilliapakk­am, Hosur, Pantnagar and Lucknow, Indore and Adityapur, JAI is investing in quality. It is ensuring that its products are of the highest quality standards; are highly reliable, and free of any defect. Investing in mistakepro­ofing through Poka-Yoke, the company is hoping that the recent measures announced by the Government will help the economy recover. “The government has announced different measures to help the MSME sector in the country, which would benefit the Indian automakers in multiple ways,” said Mehta. He mentioned that factors like skill developmen­t, interest rate reforms, scrappage policy, infrastruc­ture developmen­t, business-friendly government policies and lower GST rates will benefit the CV industry. The other factor that will help the economy, according to Mehta, is the rural economy uptick. He remarked, “Currently, in the rural areas of India, it is mainly agricultur­e that accounts for 17 per cent of the GDP and employs over 50 per cent of the population. The rise in rural demand will drive growth in the LCV segment.”

DIGITISATI­ON

Of the opinion that the agricultur­e sector appears to have been relatively less impacted by the lockdown, sustaining the demand for tractors thus, Mehta expressed that it is the rural economy that will play a pivotal role in the growth of Indian economy and the auto industry. Rural India has two-third the country’s population. The 70 per cent rural workforce generates

46 per cent of the national income. With many transport companies adopting a huband-spoke model that enables long-haul CVs to re-distribute their load to LCVs, helping them to reach villages faster, fleets are significan­tly changing their ways of working. Closely following such and other trends emerging, JAI is investing in digitisati­on to ensure better efficiency and ease of doing business. Through ERP upgradatio­n, it is looking at standardis­ation and unified view of operations. It is looking at offering better stock visibility, and to achieve better end-toend material planning. Looking at efficient scheduling of operations, the company is also working towards seamless flow of data that would enable it to track sales analysis and vehicles across the supply chain through geo maps, dealer portals and interactiv­e dashboards, and management and MIS reports available at the click of a button.

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 ??  ?? Bhupesh Mehta, President, and Head-Aftermarke­t, JAI Ltd.
Bhupesh Mehta, President, and Head-Aftermarke­t, JAI Ltd.
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