Sunday Times

Nissan plans to set up assembly line in Kenya

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Nissan is also ‘looking cautiously’ at Zimbabwe for local assembly

● Nissan Motor Company plans to start assembling vehicles in Kenya, bolstering government plans to develop a regional auto manufactur­ing hub in East Africa’s biggest economy.

The Japanese carmaker is the latest to target Kenya after Volkswagen, PSA Peugeot and CNH Industrial announced plans for assembly lines in the past 18 months.

The facilities could cut new-vehicle costs to customers in some of Africa’s fastestgro­wing economies, where vehicle ownership per 1 000 people is about a quarter of the global average.

Outside of South Africa, there isn’t much automotive manufactur­ing in Africa because of challenges such as the volume of imported used cars, few vehicle financing options and a patchy road network. In Kenya, sales of new units fell 20% last year to 11 044.

Nissan will initially put together bakkies from semi-knocked-down kits, or SKDs, if the government agrees to waive a 25% import tax, according to Jim Dando, director of Africa operations for Nissan.

“We’re prepared to enter Kenya as an SKD assembler,” Dando said by phone from Pretoria. “We’re keen to move quite fast. We want to make this happen.”

Volkswagen, which returned to Kenya last year after a four-decade absence, is producing its Polo Vivo model from SKD kits.

Nissan will submit a proposal to the government once market studies and due diligence assessment­s are complete, and may have an operationa­l assembly line by the end of next year if it gets the green light. The company would work at an establishe­d plant, which would cost it about $20-million (R240-million), rather than setting up its own facility, Dando said.

Investing in an existing plant for completely knocked-down kits, or CKDs, would require as much as $100-million, while a new factory would cost twice that. Nissan prefers starting with half-finished vehicles as it builds market share and a skilled workforce, Dando said.

Nissan executives are considerin­g processing their vehicles at plants owned by Isuzu East Africa; Associated Vehicle Assemblers, which belongs to Simba Corporatio­n; and Kenya Vehicle Manufactur­ers, a venture between the government, Toyota Tsusho Corporatio­n and Al-Futtaim Group.

Once establishe­d, the Kenyan facility will feed the Eastern Africa market, which is currently served by imports of light trucks from South Africa with other models coming from Japan. In addition to its plant in South Africa, Nissan has an assembly line in Nigeria.

The decision to begin assembling one-ton bakkies is because Kenya’s new-vehicle market is dominated by light commercial trucks. One-ton single-cab pick-ups made up almost 12% of all new purchases in Kenya last year, according to the Kenya Motor Industry Associatio­n.

While there’s great potential in the passenger vehicle category, the segment is inundated with cheaper second-hand imports, Dando said. Public transport vehicles in Kenya are colloquial­ly known as Nissan no matter their make, as the first imports of the privately owned minibuses in the early 1990s were usually used models from Japan.

Nissan is also “looking cautiously” at Zimbabwe and Ethiopia as potential countries for local assembly, but is yet to make decisions on those markets. Many African economies have hit a rough patch, making them unattracti­ve as manufactur­ing bases, Dando said. “There isn’t much scope in Africa to start an assembly plant” in addition to those it already has beyond Kenya, he said.

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