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VW Looks East

jg/sms/ap/afp/dpaMarch 31, 2009

German automaker Volkswagen has opened a new 580 million euro production plant in western India. The company aims to expand its share in the country's growing car market from 2 percent to as much as 10 percent.

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Woman clad in green cleaning Volkswagen sign in works
VW is polishing its image in IndiaImage: picture-alliance/ dpa

Not a single VW brand car will roll off the production lines at the factory near Pune to start with. The company is testing the water with a small Skoda model, aimed at the low-budget market, and then plans to add an Indian version of the VW Polo hatchback next year.

VW board member Jochem Heizmann stressed the importance of India for the company. He said the market had "enormous potential" and was "one of the fastest developing markets in the world."

"India's automobile market will grow each year from the current 1.2 million vehicles to over 2 million vehicles by 2014," Heizmann said. "Thanks to the local production of Volkswagen and Skoda models in Pune, we will benefit even more from enormous growth on the Indian automobile market in future."

Second plant more ambitious than first

staff in VW plant remove cover from car
The plant was unveiled nine months ahead of scheduleImage: picture-alliance/ dpa

The factory will have the capacity to manufacture some 110,000 vehicles a year, considerably more than the company's first plant in Aurangabad, which was opened in 2001. Some 25,000 cars are assembled each year in the city, which is also located in the state of Maharashtra.

By the end of 2010 the production plant is expected to employ around 2,500 workers.

Like its rivals, Europe's biggest carmaker has been hit by a sharp downturn in global automobile markets, but company officials have said VW has performed better than competitors because of its increasing presence in emerging markets.

The German auto giant sold nearly 19,000 vehicles in India by the end of December 2008 -- nearly 50 percent more than the same period in the previous year.