ORAGADAM, India – Daimler AG will start selling trucks
from a €700 million factory in India by September, with plans to eventually
make as many as 70,000 trucks a year as it attempts to get a bigger foothold in
this growing market for commercial vehicles.
The plant, spread over 400 acres in Oragadam near the
southern port city of Chennai ,
will start with a capacity of 36,000 vehicles a year and employ 1,400 workers,
Daimler Chairman Dieter Zetsche said. The factory is one of only three Daimler
plants worldwide where trucks as well as their engines and transmissions will
be produced at the same location.
The company plans to develop and manufacture as many as
17 truck models based on its Mercedes-Benz Axor and Mitsubishi Fuso Truck and
Bus Corp.'s Fuso platforms. It will sell the trucks under its new
India-specific Bharat Benz brand, it’s fifth globally.
The Stuttgart-based company, whose truck division is the
world's largest maker of commercial vehicles by sales, sells trucks under the
Mercedes-Benz, Freightliner, Western Star and Fuso brands worldwide.
Local sales of trucks and buses in India rose 18%
in the financial year that ended on March 31 to 809,532 vehicles, even as most
other segments witnessed weak demand due to expensive loans and higher fuel
costs.
"India 's
truck market is one of the largest and fastest-growing in the world," Mr.
Zetsche said. "Now at number three, it will climb to number two worldwide
by the end of this decade. So in the long run, you could say, 'if you don't
make it here, you won't make it at all'… a strong position in the global truck
market requires a strong position in India ."
Daimler plans to have about 70 retail outlets in 12
states across India
by the end of 2012 to sell the trucks. This will be expanded to more than 100
locations by 2014.
Daimler has been assembling its Mercedes-Benz Actros
brand of heavy-duty trucks as well as buses at a factory near the western city
of Pune since
November 2007. The plant is owned by Daimler's passenger vehicle unit,
Mercedes-Benz India Pvt. Ltd., which also assembles C-Class, E-Class and S-Class
luxury sedans.
Marc Llistosella, managing director and chief executive
of Daimler India Commercial Vehicles Pvt. Ltd., said the company is planning to
shift the assembly of the Actros trucks to the Oragadam factory.
Mr. Zetsche said Daimler will source up to 85% of the
parts for the BharatBenz trucks from more than 450 vendors across India .
He
said the company will also "significantly" increase its count of
research and development workers in Reference-: http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052702303425504577351690175701270.html