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Friday, November 30, 2012

GM to invest $1.2 billion in new Chinese auto plants

CHONGQING – A General Motors joint venture with Chinese companies will invest 6.6 billion yuan ($1.04 billion) to set up a new plant in southwest China, the local government announced Thursday.


The new plant for carmaker SGMW, located in the city of Chongqing, will be capable of producing 400,000 cars and 400,000 engines when it goes into operation in 2015. A district government in Chongqing signed the contract with SGMW on Wednesday.

Construction of the plant is expected to start in 2013, the government
said. SGMW, which focuses on the mini and small car markets, has two
bases in China already — one in the eastern coastal city of Qingdao
and another in the southern city of Liuzhou. The company said its
sales reached 1.21 million units in the first ten months of this year.

China is the world’s second-largest auto market after the United States.

The country’s auto output and sales grew at an annual pace of over 20
percent from 2000 to 2010, Miao Wei, China’s minister of industry and
information technology, said this week.

Miao expects automobile output in China to surpass 19 million units
in 2012. Across the country, auto output increased by 4.56 percent year
on year in the first ten months of 2012, according to the China
Association of Automobile Manufacturers.

Source