The Korea Times

Hyundai Motor Group chief visits India for EV leadership

- By Lee Min-hyung mhlee@koreatimes.co.kr

Hyundai Motor Group Executive Chair Chung Euisun visited India to boost the carmaker’s strategic inroads into the country’s emerging and highly lucrative electric vehicle (EV) market, the company said Thursday.

Chung’s visit to India reflects growing economic importance of the region. Last year, India solidified its footing as the world’s third-largest car market after the United States and China. More than five million new vehicles were sold in the country in 2023 alone.

The Indian government is also moving to support overseas EV manufactur­ers under a plan of expanding its EV sales portion to 30 percent out of total vehicle sales by 2030. The country pledges to drasticall­y cut tariffs on imported EVs, if their manufactur­ers make investment worth at least $500 million (688 billion won) in India and start producing EVs there within the next three years.

Hyundai Motor Group also hopes

to exploit the incentive by setting up a mid-to long-term growth strategy there. Toward that end, Hyundai Motor acquired a manufactur­ing facility in Pune, Maharashtr­a, last year. The facility is now under renovation with the group’s smart manufactur­ing system. It is forecast to achieve an annual manufactur­ing capacity of more than 200,000 vehicles upon its completion scheduled

for the latter half of 2025.

Hyundai Motor also operates a factory in Chennai whose capacity reaches more than 820,000 annually.

Kia’s production capacity there will also widen to over 430,000 vehicles within the first half of 2024. This will enable the group’s two automakers to soon manufactur­e more than 1.5 million vehicles annually when the operation of their factories goes into full swing.

Both automakers are also scheduled to launch localized EVs there. According to the group, Hyundai Motor will launch its first locally-manufactur­ed EV sometime in the latter half of this year. The Chennai factory will serve as a hub for the firm’s EV production. The automaker plans to launch a total of five EV models by 2030. It also pledged to expand the number of its EV charging stations to 485 by the end of the year.

Kia is also set to start production of its small EV localized for the market in 2025.

Chung met with executives and employees from the group’s regional headquarte­rs there. More than 3,000 officials took part in the meeting with Chung online and offline.

He stressed the strategic importance of the country during the hour-long meeting.

“India has made the biggest contributi­on to the sustainabl­e growth of Hyundai Motor Group, helping us to achieve solid earnings even during the pandemic era,” Chung said.

 ?? Courtesy of Hyundai Motor Group ?? Hyundai Motor Group Executive Chair Chung Euisun, center, poses with local staff at its regional headquarte­rs in Gurgaon, India, Tuesday.
Courtesy of Hyundai Motor Group Hyundai Motor Group Executive Chair Chung Euisun, center, poses with local staff at its regional headquarte­rs in Gurgaon, India, Tuesday.

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