Auto 2011
Auto 2011
Showing posts with label Great Wall. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Great Wall. Show all posts

China to Box and Ship Great Wall to Bulgaria


You read that correctly, dear reader, though it’s not what you think. We’re not talking about the Great Wall, we’re talking Great Wall Motor [sic], a Chinese automaker that builds everything from sedans to pickups to hatchbacks and SUVs - some of which will bring to mind [sic times two] models from other European and Japanese carmakers. And, by mid-year 2011, Great Wall Motor will have a factory in Bahovitsa, Bulgaria! Yippee!

If you, like me, know only a few things about Bulgaria, here’s a little summary from the CIA World Factbook: it sits between Romania and Turkey; it has a population of around 7 million; Communism was dropped in 1990; the country joined NATO in 2004 and the European Union in 2007 and its primary exports are clothing, iron and steel, machinery and fuels. Fascinating!

The new plan is the brainchild of Bulgarian tycoon, ex-wrestler and self-professed patriot Grisha Ganchev. Mr. Granchev’s Litex firm raised 90% of the €97 million (US$130 million) needed the build the plant, with Great Wall providing the last 10. The plant is expected to generate 1,220 jobs and build some 50,000 vehicles from knock down kits a year.

Plamen Likyov, the production manager at Litex states, presumably reflects the views of many Bulgarians when he says: “The local people hope that this factory will mean work. The global economic crisis is felt here like everywhere, and many jobs were lost.”

However, it’s not all champagne and roses for Great Wall’s Bulgaria investment. David Sedgwick, the editor of Automotive News China, is convinced that Chinese automakers are not even close to challenging their European competitors. He explains why the Bahovitsa plant is unlikely to make waves:

“They bring in the kit and reassemble the car, and there’s not a lot of automation. You really want to pay attention when it’s a full-scale assembly plant. They can cost $500 million to $1 billion. When you see a Chinese automaker taking on that kind of investment, then you know they are serious.”

And there’s more, from Jonas Parell-Plesner, a senior policy fellow at London’s European Council on Foreign Relations:

“I think they invest in countries where they don’t expect a backlash.”

Ouch. The Bulgarian auto market isn’t exactly booming either, with just 26,813 cars being sold in 2009 and 57,927 the year before. It will be hard for any new manufacturer to make waves, especially against strong European competition.

Alexander Dimitrov, a sales manager at one of the nation’s Renault Dacia dealerships, explains:

“Bulgarians use cars to make an impression. They would rather buy a 10-year-old Mercedes than a new Chinese car.”

Mr. Granchev and Great Wall are undeterred, however. The Bulgarian multi-millionaire is convinced there’s a market for Chinese cars at the low end of the market. Andy Liu, Great Wall’s Deputy Head of European Marketing, agrees:

“Our equipment will be very good and our price will be very competitive. That’s a characteristic of Chinese manufacturers.”

One of the firm’s models, a sedan, is likely to sell for €5,000 (US$6,588), undercutting the Romanian built Dacia Logan by about €1,000 (US$1,318). A Great Wall spokesperson told the New York Times that the company would be setting up a dealer and parts / service network in the country, probably with the assistance of local importers.

Only time will tell whether Mr. Granchev’s investment will be more fruit than folly.

By Tristan Hankins

Source: New York Times


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British Group to Import China's Great Wall Motor Cars Into Europe from 2010


The Chinese maker of original masterpieces such as the Fiat Panda Haval M1, GWPeri, Toyota-Scion Florid and Coolbear, Great Wall Motors, has struck a deal with I.M. Group, a UK-based automotive importer and distributor for Subaru, Isuzu and Daihatsu, to import its vehicles into Europe starting from next year. The British company said that it will initially target the Baltic states of Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania, and from 2011, the Scandinavian region, the UK and Ireland.

"Great Wall Motor Company, one of the few privately-owned Chinese car companies, has copied designed and built all of the European-bound models specifically to meet EU whole-vehicle type approval standards," I.M. Group said in a prepared statement for the press.

"This will ensure that Great Wall models deliver high standards of crash-worthiness, equal to those of modern European and Japanese vehicles."

The UK-based importer said that it will release further details about the launch of the Great Wall brand next year.

The Chinese automaker became known to the Western public a few years ago when it introduced a series of cars that shamelessly copied European and Japanese products including the Fiat Panda and Toyota - Scion cars.

Last year, the Fiat Group sued Great Wall Motors in Europe and China to prevent the company from selling the GWPeri claiming that the mini closely resembled it's Panda model. While the Fiat Group won the legal battle in Europe thus keeping the GWPeri out of the EU, a Chinese court in Hong Kong dismissed Fiat's claims for infringement.

You can get a taste of the numerous production and concept vehicles from Great Wall Motors in our gallery below.