China's Nanjing Automobile Group, which took control of Britain's collapsed
MG Rover last year, on Wednesday said it would build MG-brand cars in Oklahoma,
joining a wave of Chinese automakers looking to sell cars in the United States.
A MG Rover badge is seen on front of a Rover
car in London, April 16, 2005. China's Nanjing Automobile Group, which
took control of Britain's collapsed MG Rover last year, plans to build
MG-brand cars in Oklahoma, state officials said on Wednesday.
[Reuters] |
The company, which would be first Chinese automaker to assemble cars in the
U.S., said it plans to assemble vehicles at three locations: in Nanjing, China,
at an all-new plant; at the now-closed Longbridge assembly plant near
Birmingham, England; and at a new U.S. assembly plant to be built in Ardmore,
Oklahoma.
The MG brand, which was discontinued in April 2005 after a financial
collapse, would first be relaunched in the U.K. in 2007 and would hit U.S.
showrooms in May or June of 2008, company executive told reporters on a
conference call.
Nanjing plans to locate its headquarters for MG sales, marketing and
distribution in Oklahoma City, while research and development would be done in
Norman at the University of Oklahoma, it said.
Nanjing is one of several Chinese car makers, including Geely Automobile
Holdings Ltd. and Chery Automotive Co., hoping to crack the global car market
amid a slowdown in demand at home.
It has a small joint venture in China with Italy's Fiat SpA , but has
struggled to make headway against bigger rivals that tied up with top brands
General Motors Corp. and Volkswagen AG.
The company said it plans to offer a full range of MG sports cars and sedans
to consumers, including the TF roadster and the new TF Coupe.
Three sedans would be built at Nanjing's facilities in China, while the MG TF
roadster would be built at the factory in Longbridge and a newly designed TF
Coupe would be built at the Oklahoma facility, the company said.
The new company, called MG Motors of North America, would create more than
500 jobs in Oklahoma, the Oklahoma Department of Commerce said.
Construction of Nanjing's Oklahoma plant is scheduled to begin early next
year, with production starting by late 2008. Oklahoma put together an incentive
package, which includes tax breaks, for the company to locate there.
EXPORTING OKLAHOMA-MADE TF COUPES
Nanjing said capital investment would be more than $2 billion, to be funded
by state and local governments in Oklahoma, the state's development agency and
private investors.
Nanjing hired Duke Hale, who previously worked at Volvo, Mazda, Isuzu and
Lotus, to be the new company's president and chief executive officer.
The company said Hale would be responsible for the revival of the MG brand in
Britain and Europe, followed by the relaunch of MG in North America.
"We looked at a lot of different locations around the country, but none could
equal the overall appeal of Oklahoma," Hale said in a statement. "Oklahoma also
provides an ideal geographic location to support our distribution efforts for
the North American market and for exporting products abroad."
Hale said the company decided to build a U.S. plant to differentiate itself
from other companies, like Geely, which are planning to export vehicles from
China to the U.S. market.
And tax breaks from Oklahoma have made manufacturing in the United States
competitive, he added.
"We may have tax advantages in Ardmore that will allow us to build the car,
believe it or not, almost as competitively as China," Hale said.
Hale also said the company plans to export the Oklahoma-made TF Coupes to
Europe.
He said the company will not restrict itself to being a niche player either
in Europe or U.S..
Nanjing Automobile, one of China's oldest auto makers, surprised the motoring
world when it outbid top Chinese car maker Shanghai Automotive Industry Corp. to
buy MG Rover out of bankruptcy for $98 million (53 million pounds) in mid-2005.
Earlier this year, it took a 33-year lease on the former MG Rover plant at
Longbridge in central England.
Britain's Transport and General Workers Union, was surprised and concerned
about Nanjing making MG cars in the U.S.
"There have been some concerns about Nanjing revising its plans downwards in
respect of Longbridge," said Dave Osborne, the union's national secretary for
the car industry. "Taking these together, the T&G is calling for an urgent
meeting with the company to find out exactly what they are now planning for car
making in the UK."