. 24/7 Space News .
India competes to draw big-name automakers

by Staff Writers
Chennai, India (AFP) Feb 14, 2008
When South Korean automaker Hyundai first drove to India in 1996, it scouted around before choosing to build its factory in a southern Indian village of rice paddies and wetlands.

Now, drawn by tax breaks and infrastructure advantages, it has returned to open a second factory on the same site and plans to double its production to 600,000 units a year.

The confidence Hyundai is displaying in the facility indicates the growing ambitions of India's state governments as they compete against each other to attract some of the world's biggest automobile makers.

The stakes are high -- the government estimates 50 billion dollars of auto industry investment will flow into India by 2016.

Most state governments, including Tamil Nadu whose capital is Chennai, are offering fiscal and tax sops to lure carmakers tempted by a market where sales are forecast to reach two million units by 2010 from 1.4 million last year.

For the states, the lure of the car sector -- which currently employs some 13 million people -- lies in its potential to boost jobs and infrastructure, said industry analyst Murad Ali Baig.

"For every job created by the automobile industry," Baig said, "there are five more created in the secondary sector.

"From tea shops and hotels to masons, and educators -- it has a multiplying effect on employment."

Hyundai's new plant, making India its biggest overseas manufacturing base, opened earlier this month in Sriperumbudur, some 50 kilometres (30 miles) from the port city of Chennai.

"We always had plans to use India as an export base," said Arvind Saxena, a senior vice president at Hyundai India. "Sriperumbudur's proximity to the sea port and the international airport were major advantages."

Saxena said they also got support in tax exemptions and land acquisition, and pointed to good infrastructure and plenty of skilled manpower at hand.

Those, coupled with a thriving spare-parts industry, are advantages which have enabled Chennai to steal a march over rival automobile hubs.

Chennai also hosts Ford, Mitsubishi, Renault-Nissan and BMW and production capacity of 1.2 million cars a year, 35 percent of India's total.

It has attracted 4.5 billion dollars of auto investment so far.

"Chennai has consolidated its position as the Detroit of South Asia," said M. Velumurugan, director of Guidance Bureau, the agency overseeing industrial investment in Tamil Nadu.

Velumurugan said the state was in talks with carmakers that could bring at least three billion dollars of investment this year, although he declined to name names.

Ford last month announced plans to invest 500 million dollars to expand in India, most of which would go to its Chennai facility, raising its financial commitment to India to more than 875 million dollars.

That too was part of a "long-term and strategic plan" for India, said John Parker, executive vice president for Ford Asia Pacific and Africa.

Chennai's location at the centre of south India, a prosperous region of 220 million people that has led India's nine percent economic growth, gives it the edge over other aspiring hubs, said auto industry official Dilip Chenoy.

It is competing against cities such as Pune in western Maharashtra state, which has drawn DaimlerChrysler and Volkswagen AG, while India's Tata group is making the world's cheapest car, the 2,500-dollar Nano, in West Bengal.

Suzuki's local unit, India's biggest carmaker, is based in Gurgaon in the north.

The green lobby, however, frets about the energy and environmental impact the boom in car production and sales will bring, while still acknowledging its potential to create jobs.

"Development is essential for job creation," Greenpeace campaigner Soumya Bratarahup said, "but development must be sustainable."

Community
Email This Article
Comment On This Article

Related Links
Car Technology at SpaceMart.com



Memory Foam Mattress Review
Newsletters :: SpaceDaily :: SpaceWar :: TerraDaily :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News


London plans to punish gas-guzzling vehicles
London (AFP) Feb 12, 2008
London Mayor Ken Livingstone on Tuesday announced a stinging new charge on driving gas-guzzling vehicles into the centre of the British capital, in a bid to cut pollution.







  • Predicting The Radiation Risk To ESA's Astronauts
  • All systems go for SKorea's space-ready kimchi
  • Canadian Astronauts Julie Payette And Robert Thirsk To Go On Space Missions In 2009
  • Doctors Give Green Light For Flight Of Next Space Tourist

  • Still Grinding After All These Years Makes For Much Opportunity
  • NASA Budget Request Strong On Earth Weak On Mars
  • ESA Presents Mars In 3D
  • Mars In Their Sights

  • ILS Proton Launches THOR 5 Satellite
  • Bigelow Aerospace And Lockheed Martin Converging On Terms For Launch Services
  • USAF Awards United Launch Alliance Three Delta IV Missions
  • Vandenberg Prepares For First Atlas V Launch

  • Indonesia To Develop New EO Satellite
  • Russia To Launch Space Project To Monitor The Arctic In 2010
  • New Radar Satellite Technique Sheds Light On Ocean Current Dynamics
  • SPACEHAB Subsidiary Wins NASA Orbiting Carbon Observatory Contract

  • ASU Research Solves Solar System Quandary
  • Happy Second Birthday New Horizons
  • The PI's Perspective: Autumn 2007: Onward to the Kuiper Belt
  • Data For The Next Generations

  • Possible Progenitor Of Special Supernova Type Detected
  • The Spinning Magnet Of A Sun-Like Star
  • Astronomers Eye Ultra-Young, Bright Galaxy In Early Universe
  • Spitzer Catches Young Stars In Their Baby Blanket Of Dust

  • India's Moon Mission Likely To Be Put Off To June
  • India to announce lunar mission date this month
  • NASA Recruiting Volunteers For Out Of This World Jobs
  • Volcanic deposits may aid lunar outposts

  • modu And Tele Atlas Join Forces To Combine Mobile Connectivity And Personal Nav Content
  • US Marines Select Rockwell Collins ParaNav
  • GPS For The Prostate: System Keeps Radiation Therapy On Target
  • Graybar Delivery Advantage Program To Help Customers Better Manage Incoming Material

  • The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2007 - SpaceDaily.AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by SpaceDaily on any Web page published or hosted by SpaceDaily. Privacy Statement