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Updates from May, 2012

  • Sanand, India • The first sight of India’s newest “Motor City” is a collection of giant blue-and-grey structures, windowless boxes in corporate colours that are the hallmark of modern manufacturing.

    The warehouses and machining plants, walled in on an enormous site of more than 400 hectares, are owned by Tata Motors, which moved to the western state of Gujarat in 2008 to start producing its Nano small car.

    A short distance up the road in Sanand, an hour’s drive from the state’s biggest city, Ahmedabad, teams of labourers, drilling rigs and trucks are preparing the foundations for a new $1-billion Ford facility.

    Rising from the dust opposite fields of swaying wheat is a new global car manufacturing hub, the sort of industrial project that politicians in India often talk about creating but have seldom delivered.

    Michael Boneham, an Australian who heads Ford in India, lists the reasons for investing in Gujarat and in the process highlights some of the failings of other states.
    The easy availability of land was “critical” — Ford did not want to risk the sort of protests that have blighted industrial projects elsewhere — and he has nothing but praise for the local government.

    “I’d call them business-like. We’ve set up a two-weekly and now monthly meeting with key project leaders,” the India managing director said during a recent visit to the site.

    “There are assignments, timings  and there are commitments that are met, which is what impresses me. The government also has transparency, which is important for us, and accessibility.”

    Reliable power supplies, decent infrastructure and ports by Indian standards and the availability of educated labour were the other factors that tipped the decision on where to locate Ford’s second Indian plant, which will open in 2014.

    Accompanying the Detroit-based group will be 19 automotive suppliers who are set to build factories and train workers, in the process creating the sort of corporate ecosystem that looks set to attract other manufacturers.

    Farther up the road, French car manufacturer Peugeot has chosen a plot of land for its first factory in India — a proposed $850-million investment — but its plans are on hold due to the debt crisis in the eurozone.

    Maruti Suzuki, India’s biggest car manufacturer, is pressing ahead with a factory elsewhere in Gujarat — in Mehsana, close to the Mundra port — while the motorcycle group Hero has also picked the state for its fourth factory. “Power was a big consideration [in choosing Gujarat],” Shinzo Nakanishi, Maruti Suzuki chief executive, said in an interview at the India auto show earlier this year.

    “Other than Gujarat, states have a problem of power supply,” he added. “Also, the quality of the manpower is good … and it was close to the port, our own port.”

    Maruti’s operations have traditionally been focused in northern Haryana state, while the other main Indian car-making hub is in southern Tamil Nadu where Ford, Hyundai, Renault-Nissan and Michelin already have factories.

    The arrival of global car manufacturers has been a boon for Gujarat’s ambitious chief minister, Narendra Modi, a right-wing Hindu nationalist who holds a much-hyped annual “Vibrant Gujarat” summit to attract investors.

    His record as a no-nonsense business-friendly leader is expected to be part of his eventual pitch to become prime minister — a task made difficult by his association with religious riots in 2002 that left more than 2,000 dead.

    Gujarat will soon have Asia’s biggest solar park and a state-sponsored scheme to build a banking and finance hub with more office space than the financial districts of Paris, Tokyo, London and Shanghai is underway.

    Economic growth in Gujarat has outpaced India’s as a whole over the past decade, hitting 10.5% in 2010-2011 compared with 8.4% for the country, official figures show.
    Critics say Modi’s achievements during his 11-year rule are not what they seem, however, relying too heavily on undisclosed and overgenerous inducements to attract companies.

    The Caravan current affairs magazine reported in March that Tata will retain the money it owes in taxes from its factory and only start paying it back after 20 years — at an interest rate of 0.1%.

    But if the chief minister’s economic record and methods remain contentious, few doubt his vision.

    An estimated two thirds of India’s vast 1.2 billion population continue to scratch out an existence on small family farms.

    Creating a thriving manufacturing sector is vital if the country is to raise incomes and offer job opportunities to its increasingly numerous and young workforce whose aspirations are changing, economists and government planners say.

    “We need to create eight to 10 million jobs every year over the next decade to absorb the expected growth in the labour force,” Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh reminded delegates at a recent emerging markets summit.

    On the other side of the road that leads to the Sanand motor hub lies a vision of traditional India: fields where men and women, skins creased by a lifetime of toil under the baking sun, cut the harvest by hand.

    Babubhai Patel, who estimates his age at about 50, owns a parcel of farm land just on the edge of the new industrial park. As an illiterate farmer, he has little prospect of a job in the factories and he blames the construction work for water shortages over the last four months. His 19-year-old son Mahindra, who has just completed school, is more enthusiastic. “I’d prefer to work in the factory,” he says.


    1:00 pm on May 7, 2012
     
  • New Delhi • India’s capital city is a study in contrasts. While the dilapidated buildings and sidewalks may be crumbling, look closer and you can see evidence of New Delhi’s former glory. Wipe away the dust at your feet and a colourful mosaic of marble is revealed. Walk up to that grimy doorway and you can see it’s also made of marble, a formerly ivory hue. The power lines may be wrapped around that tree, causing you to wonder if that’s why the Internet service in your hotel is so slow, but take a good look at the tree and you see how beautiful it really is.

    Don’t worry if some stretches of the busy tree-lined street have no working traffic lights and you have to risk your life to get to the other side — the cars and motorized rickshaws slow down and let you pass unharmed.


    Once across the street, the sweet smell of sandalwood beckons you to a nearby Indian arts and crafts shop. Inside, the scent of incense mixes with the aroma of Kashmir tea, lending credence to your romantic notion of what India should smell like and dispelling the nasty rumours of odours of a less fragrant variety.

    Rows upon rows of gorgeous silk and wool scarves are stacked floor to ceiling in two rooms of the shop. In another room, dozens of colourful silk carpets are displayed on the floor or hanging on the wall. For a shopaholic, this is Nirvana. Even my male colleagues, who usually steer clear of such womanly pursuits, are impressed by the colourful wares. They help me pick out a few carpets and scarves, offering their opinions on which designs they like best. (They shall remain anonymous in order to preserve their manhood.) I also stock up on incense and tea, while my two colleagues wait patiently.

    Fellow explorer of Italian descent Christopher Columbus can finally rest in peace — I have discovered the Silk Road!

    After depleting much of the stock at the first shop, the three of us make our way to a few other stores near our hotel, The Metropolitan, where we buy some sandalwood carvings and silkscreen paintings. One of my colleagues buys a heavy-metal Buddha head made out of some unknown material that even the customs agent at Heathrow Airport can’t identify.

    Since there is nothing left for us (me, really) to buy at the tourist shops, I suggest we take a stroll through the nearby outdoor market. After all, I want to see the real New Dehli.

    The marketplace is bustling with energy as spice merchants flog their fragrant, colourful wares alongside fruit, egg and cotton vendors. It’s here that I finally find the wooden prayer beads my friend has asked me to buy for her. They cost a fraction of what they would have cost in the tourist shops. For a minute, I wonder if I should’ve waited to buy my silken wares. But there are no carpets or scarves to be seen out here, so I’m content that I got some good bargains. And if not, at least I helped support the local economy. Everybody wins.

    But despite the euphoria of our mini shopping spree, it is a small consolation for not being able to visit the Taj Mahal, one of the most beautiful buildings on Earth and one of the seven wonders of the world, located just south of here. But this is a business trip and we don’t have time to travel the three hours to Agra.

    So, after our short shopping trip, it’s back to the hotel to eat some delicious Tikki Masala, answer some emails (if the Internet is working) and get some much-needed sleep as the next day we’re off to the auto show, the real purpose of our trip.

    Three days is certainly not enough time to spend in such an incredible country as India, but it is long enough to realize that I want to come back.


    6:25 pm on January 13, 2012
     
  • NEW DELHI • After a few days in India’s capital city, where streetlights are an option on some roads, one wouldn’t think a luxury automaker could sell a motorized rickshaw here, never mind its top-of-the-line models.

    Yet carmakers such as German luxury brands Audi, BMW and Mercedes are thriving in this country, particularly in major urban centres such as New Delhi and Mumbai.

    While BMW and Mercedes each plan to sell 10,000 cars in India this year, Audi is a little more conservative, projecting sales of 8,000 units in 2012.

    “India is a key strategic market for Audi and we are making a clear long-term statement in the country with ambitious expansion plans,” said Peter Schwarzenbauer, Audi’s member of the board of management for marketing and sales, during the media preview days of Auto Expo 2012, the premiere showcase of new vehicles in India.

    “Audi has seen phenomenal growth since its inception in India five years ago and today is the fastest-expanding premium brand in the market,” Schwarzenbauer said.

    Audi experienced overall sales growth of 83.5% in India in 2011, with sales of 5,511 vehicles last year compared with 3,003 in 2010. Audi sells the A4, A6, A7 Sportback, A8L, Q5, Q7, RS5 Coupé, R8 and R8 Spyder in India, along with its new addition in 2012, the Q3 compact SUV, which was unveiled during the show. The Q3, which sits below the Q5 in terms of size and price, is expected to compete head to head with BMW’s X1 compact SUV.

    Audi India has 15 showrooms in the country in Ahmedabad, Bengaluru, Chandigarh, Chennai, Delhi, Gurgaon, Hyderabad, Indore, Jaipur, Kochi, Kolkata, Ludhiana, Mumbai West, Pune and Surat. This year, the automaker plans to expand its network to 23 dealerships, including showrooms in Coimbatore, Delhi West, Lucknow and Mumbai South.


    6:00 pm on January 13, 2012