Volkswagen Teramont SUV during the launch |
German car maker Volkswagen says it will produce a combined
24,300 new units in its plants in Kenya and South Africa as it seeks to
diversify sales on the continent, whose auto market has seen slow growth
in the past three years.
The market forecast is for modest recovery in 2018, thanks to rebounding economies and new assembly plants.
Thomas
Schaefer, chief executive of Volkswagen Group South Africa, said they
plan to double assembly at the Thika plant in Kenya from the 300
vehicles produced last year.
VW expects car sales to pick up, unlike last year when businesses recorded reduced purchases.
This was attributed to political uncertainty over the general election and a slowdown in economic activity.
Sales in Kenya fell to an estimated 67,000 vehicles, both used and new
The tough business environment in 2017 resulted in a sharp drop in passenger vehicle sales in Africa.
It
is estimated that sales dropped by 9 per cent, down from about 1.32
million in 2016 to just above 1.19 million in 2017, the third year of
decline in a row.
Egypt, Algeria, Tunisia, Nigeria and Libya took the biggest sales hits.
“The
drop was more pronounced in the passenger car segment, which is
estimated to have declined by 12 per cent in the same period — down from
979,014 in 2016, to 862,907 in 2017,” said the International
Organisation of Motor Vehicle Manufacturers.
However,
with the positive prospects in coming years, Volkswagen is boosting its
assembling capacity in South Africa to serve export markets.
In
South Africa, the continent’s biggest vehicle market, VW plans to
increase production from 111,000 in 2017 to 135,000 this year.
Last
year, South Africa topped the light vehicle sales chart, reaching
356,000 units, ahead of Morocco with 155,000 and Egypt and Nigeria, with
100,000 each.
Opportunities
While
Africa offers many opportunities after launching its largest trading
bloc, Africa Continental Free Trade Area (AfCTA), and even with the
growing middle class and booming economies, vehicle manufactures says
the market is still bogged down by a number of challenges.
African
governments have been criticised for not introducing policies banning
used cars, reducing the continent to a dumping ground, adding to
environmental concerns and suppressing job creation.
Rwandan
President Paul Kagame’s tough stance on used cars and his push for
regional integration to create a bigger African market has endeared him
to the assemblers.
The president, who has also shut out
second-hand clothes and leather products, which put him on collision
course with the US government, has now turned his sights on used cars.
“Africa
does not need to be a dumping ground for second-hand cars or
second-hand anything,”
President Kagame said at the unveiling ceremony
of the Volkswagen Polo model when it was rolled out from its new
assembly plant in Kigali’s Special Economic Zone.
(The EastAfrican)
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