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Nissan Motor Co. plans to shift production of its Micra cars for the European market from the U.K. to Chennai, which it also aims to use as an export hub for Africa and the Middle East. The company plans to roll out its first made-in-India compact in May, part of a seven-year, $920 million India investment it made with partner Renault. Volkswagen AG has invested Euro 580 million ($847 million) in India, and this month started production of its first India compact at a factory that can make up to 110,000 cars a year. General Motors Co. opened a second, $300 million factory in India in September 2008, boosting annual capacity to 225,000 vehicles. This month, it teamed up with China's SAIC to launch an India joint venture, with fresh investment of up to $350 million. Analysts caution that India's emergence as an auto hub still faces headwinds like bureaucratic red tape, labor unrest, inefficient ports, poor infrastructure and competition from Thailand and South Korea, which recently signed a free trade agreement giving carmakers duty-free access to Europe. "It's not a foregone conclusion despite the high demand," said John Bonnell, director of automotive forecasting at J.D. Power and Associates in Bangkok. "Compromising that is a lot of red tape, bureaucracy and unions." Still, the global appetite for basic cars is growing. Sales of such cars will hit 4.9 million vehicles this year, up 13 percent from last year, while total car and truck sales will shrink by 6 percent, to 62.9 million vehicles, says J.D. Power and Associates. The Indian government has encouraged small car production with tax incentives, and, unlike China, it allows foreign companies to fully own their Indian subsidiaries. That control over production and revenues is part of what convinced South Korea's Hyundai Motor Co., the largest car exporter in India, to shift small car production to India 11 years ago, said H.S. Lheem, shortly before he stepped down as chief executive of Hyundai Motor India. Nowadays, India is Hyundai's largest operation outside Korea. So far this fiscal year, Hyundai has exported about half of the 377,019 cars it manufactured in India, 65 percent of them to Europe. "Chennai could be a good Detroit in India," Lheem said.
[Associated
Press;
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