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Automakers look for new ways to battle sales slump
China becomes driving force

Companies gear up for Beijing auto show. Sales forecast to rise by 15 percent

By Joe McDonald
Associated Press

BEIJING: On display at next week's Beijing auto show: global automakers' hopes that booming China will drive sales this year as demand elsewhere slumps.

General Motors plans to show 42 models at Auto China 2008. Volkswagen is debuting two cars designed with domestic partners for the China market. More than 100 others ranging from luxury automakers Daimler AG and Bentley to ambitious Chinese upstarts are showing off compacts, sedans and SUVs.

''The interest is unprecedented for automakers. It's become one of the industry's main events,'' said Tim Dunne, director of Asia-Pacific market intelligence for J.D. Power and Associates.

The reason is simple: Sales in China — already the world's No. 2 vehicle market after the United States — are forecast to rise by 15 percent this year, in contrast to flat or falling sales in the United States, Europe and Japan.

''Both for volume carmakers and luxury carmakers, they all are looking at China as their main growth engine,'' said John Zeng, China auto industry analyst for the consulting firm Global Insight.

Chinese automakers, little known abroad, hope to use the show to build global brands even as they face growing competition at home from bigger, richer foreign rivals.


China's Chery Automobile Co. says it will display 26 of its own vehicles in Beijing, ranging from subcompacts to an SUV. Chery has a deal with Chrysler LLC to produce a low-cost car for the U.S. market but the release has been pushed back as the partners reportedly work on improving the vehicle's quality.

Another Chinese competitor, Geely Group Ltd., says it will show 23 models and a concept, or display, car.

China overtook Japan as the world's second-biggest vehicle market in 2006.

Last year, Chinese drivers bought 5.5 million cars, minivans and SUVs and 3 million commercial vehicles. That was up from a total of just 1.6 million vehicles sold in 1997. J.D. Power says sales should grow by 1 million vehicles annually through 2015.

The officially endorsed car culture has transformed China.

A country that had almost no private cars 15 years ago is crisscrossed by new highways. Ancient city centers have been bulldozed to make way for car-friendly avenues. Cities are surrounded by American-style shopping centers with sprawling parking lots.

But the car culture has left major cities choked by smog and rush-hour traffic jams. It has boosted dependence on imported oil, which worried communist leaders see as a strategic weakness.

Automakers are so eager for a share of China's market that they are willing to bear the high cost of two Chinese auto shows — one in Beijing annually and a second every other year in Shanghai.

Most shows are so expensive they usually are held once every two to three years. In Europe, the Paris and Frankfurt shows are held in alternate years. Tokyo's auto show takes place every other year.

BEIJING: On display at next week's Beijing auto show: global automakers' hopes that booming China will drive sales this year as demand elsewhere slumps.

Get the full article here.


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