Xinhua Insight: Wuhan, start your engines!
Xinhua, May 16, 2016 Adjust font size:
Jiangxia District in central China's Wuhan City takes pride in its young car culture: streets here are named after Chevrolet, Buick and Cadillac. People introduce their hometown as "China's Motor City," and many young people expect to work in the automotive industry when they leave school or college.
The district is home to Shanghai General Motors (SAIC-GM) Wuhan factory, which opened last year and assembles 1,300 Buick Excelle a day, at full tilt, supporting an ecosystem of dozens of auto part factories. Just across the Yangtze River is a new Dongfeng Renault plant that opened in February. The joint venture plans an eventual annual capacity of 300,000 cars.
The riverfront is at the heart of the city's ambitions. Wuhan attracts foreign investment partly through ease of water transit and proximity to the inland market. The city was founded on steel and the car industry is seen as a way of weaning the city off over-reliance on a declining industry.
Once China's biggest steel maker and pride of the city, Wuhan Iron and Steel (Group) Corp. (WISCO) is now under pressure to cut excess capacity like many others. Board chairman Ma Guoqiang has said that as many as 50,000 workers "will need to find another job."
Thankfully for those about to be laid off, Wuhan is home to nine car factories, including joint ventures with Renault, PSA and Honda, plus dozens of auto part-makers. The auto industry now supplies 20 percent of the city's industrial output and employs more than 1 million residents.
A personnel manager with Dongfeng Peugeot Citroen Automobile (DPCA), told Xinhua that the number of assembly workers is actually falling as robots take their jobs, but more jobs are opening up among parts-makers and at vehicle storage facilities.
In the eyes of local people, the car industry is where the action is.
"Wuhan is becoming a city of cars, attracting billion-dollar projects, and many smaller plants. I came back because I saw the potential here," said Kang Mansheng, 35, who works in a part-maker in Jiangxia. Kang spent eight years as a driver and mechanic in east China but came back in 2015 with his wife and many colleagues as local salaries improved.
"Many people have had similar experiences. They have worked in car businesses in other cities and returned to Wuhan with experience and skills. They have faith in the future of the city," Kang said.
STEEL ALLY
Apart from picking up the employment slack left by steel mills, the auto industry is a major customer of steel producers, and the city sees it as a stimuli to upgrading the steel industry.
WISCO now supplies steel panels to local car plants, 70 percent of DPCA's panels in fact, along with other marks like Volkswagen and Land Rover.
Li Minghuan, a director of the DPCA technical center, said WISCO began supplying low-end panels in 2000 and is now a strategic supplier of DPCA. The two companies even have a joint R&D lab.
"Our cooperation is growing, and the coalition of two heavyweights can raise the industrial and technical levels of the entire city," Li said.
A spokesperson for WISCO sales department said they sell steel to dozens of auto-makers in Wuhan and environs, greatly aided by low cost water transportation on the Yangtze.
AUTO FEVER
Wuhan is not the only Chinese city switching to auto production.
Upstream on the Yangtze, Chongqing has similar ambitions. Home to Changan Automobile and a new Beijing Hyundai plant, the southwestern city is working toward an annual capacity of 4 million cars by 2017. Other cities producing more than 1 million cars annually include Shanghai, Beijing, Changchun and Guangzhou, but overcapacity concerns are rising as the car market becomes saturated.
China sold more than 24.5 million cars in 2015, up 4.7 percent year-on-year, but that rate was down by 2.2 percentage points on 2014.
Yet there are still positive signs. Dong Yang, executive vice chairman of the China Association of Automobile Manufacturers, cites low car ownership (only around 30 percent of Chinese families have a car) and anticipated future economic growth as mitigating factors against oversupply.
Industry analyst Jia Xinguang also sees great potential in western cities, where the market remains unsaturated and unfettered by purchase limits, but warns of the pitfalls inherent in any attempt to emulate the United States' Detroit, a city now virtually bankrupt through over-reliance on one industry. Endi