Germany-United States auto giant Daimler
Chrysler said yesterday it will begin assembling Mercedes-Benz
sedans at its joint venture with Beijing Automotive Industry
Holding Corp by the end of this year.
The first Mercedes-Benz E-Class sedan will
roll off the production line in Beijing by the end of this
year, said Trevor Hale, spokesman for DaimlerChrysler (China)
Investment Co Ltd, in a statement to China Daily.
His remarks clear up recent doubt about the timetable for
local production of Mercedes-Benz sedans created by later-than-expected
approval from the government.
The joint venture Beijing-Benz Daimler Chrysler
Automotive Co Ltd was granted final approval just days ago.
The 50-50 venture, which is part of a framework
agreement worth 1 billion euros (US$1.2 billion) between
DaimlerChrysler and Beijing Automotive, will have an annual
production capacity of 25,000 Mercedes-Benz E and C-Class
sedans.
"It's too early to know how many vehicles
we will produce this year, and the point at which we reach
the 25,000 capacity depends on market demand," Hale
said.
Sales of Mercedes-Benz cars rose in China
as imports grew by 18 per cent in the first five months
of this year from a year earlier, he added.
Yale Zhang, a Shanghai-based analyst at
US auto consultancy CSM Worldwide Corp, said: "Output
of Mercedes-Benz sedans in China will be quite small in
the early stages as their prices will not be competitive
due to the government's policy."
According to China's new auto industry policy, foreign brand
cars built domestically will have completed vehicle import
tariffs imposed on them, if the value of imported kits used
to make them account for 60 per cent or more of their value.
Tariffs on car imports stand at 30 per
cent, with those on imported components at 15 per cent.
The car imports tariffs will decline to
25 per cent by the middle of next year in line with commitments
to the WTO.
"Prices of Mercedes-Benz sedans made
in China, as well as those of BMW, would decline in the
medium and long-term with increasing local contents,"
Zhang said.
"However, it will be a hard job for Mercedes-Benz and
BMW, as luxury brands, to enhance local contents of their
vehicles built in China," he added.
BMW started to produce its 3 and 5 Series
sedans in 2003 at its joint venture in northeastern China
in partnership with Brilliance China Auto.
But BMW's sales on the mainland tumbled
by 11 per cent year-on-year to 3,977 vehicles in the first
quarter of this year.
China's luxury car market is mainly controlled by Audi,
another German brand, which began local production in the
1990s.
Audi, which runs a joint venture in northeastern
China with First Automotive Works Corp, sold 64,018 vehicles
in China last year, up just 0.8 per cent from 2003.
Besides the Mercedes-Benz sedan project,
DaimlerChrysler has agreed to form a joint venture with
Foton, an affiliate of Beijing Automotive, to produce Mercedes-Benz
heavy trucks.
DaimlerChrysler also plans to make 40,000
Mercedes-Benz vans annually in a venture in eastern China
with Fujian Motor Industry Corp and China Motor Corp in
Taiwan.
Source:China Daily