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CAR TECH
Toyota to build plant in China in investment splurge
by Staff Writers
Tokyo (AFP) April 11, 2015


China court jails VW joint venture official: report
Shanghai (AFP) April 10, 2015 - A former executive of Sino-German auto joint venture FAW-Volkswagen has been jailed for life for taking millions of dollars in bribes, according to a state media report.

A court in the northeastern province of Jilin sentenced Shi Tao, former deputy general manager of the venture's sales company, for accepting 33 million yuan ($5.4 million) in bribes, the Shanghai Daily newspaper reported.

Besides taking cash bribes from advertisers and car dealers, Shi was also found to own nearly 27 million yuan worth of property including villas in Beijing purchased with funds he could not account for, it said on Thursday.

The court and Volkswagen China could not be immediately reached for comment.

FAW-Volkswagen partners the German auto giant with FAW -- originally known as First Automotive Works and now China's third biggest automaker by sales.

Chinese authorities are also investigating the former chairman and Communist Party secretary of China FAW Group, Xu Jianyi, for violations of discipline and the law.

The party's disciplinary watchdog has given no details of the investigation into Xu, but such language typically refers to corruption.

Chinese President Xi Jinping launched a much-publicised drive against corruption after he came to power two years ago, vowing to target both high-level "tigers" and low-ranking "flies".

Toyota is planning to build a new plant in northern China as the world's top automaker ramps up investment after a two-year freeze, reports said Saturday.

Proposals for the plant in Tianjin -- due to open in 2018 at the earliest with a capacity of 100,000 cars a year -- should be finalised by the summer, Jiji Press and Kyodo News agency reported.

The news comes after reports that Toyota is planning to invest a combined $1.3 billion to build new plants in the Chinese city of Guangzhou and Guanajuato, Mexico.

The Japanese carmaker began operating a new Thai plant in 2013, but since then it has halted investment as the global car market has struggled with oversupply and weak demand.

At the new plant, Toyota will likely produce fuel-efficient passenger vehicles under a local brand through a joint venture with a Chinese firm, the reports said.

The vehicles would meet stricter environmental regulations in China, where air pollution is a serious social problem.

Toyota kept its title as the world's biggest automaker last year as it announced record sales of 10.23 million vehicles, outpacing General Motors and Volkswagen.

oh/cah

Toyota

General Motors

Volkswagen


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