Nissan on Friday said
that it had become the first major vehicle manufacturer to build a car in Nigeria,
following the announcement of the Nigeria
Automotive Policy.
The
policy in January raised import tariffs on fully built-up cars from 20% to 70%
for those companies which do not participate in the programme. (South Africa has a 25% import duty on passenger
cars.)
The inaugural vehicle, a Nissan Patrol, rolled off the production line at
an assembly plant in Lagos.
The Japanese manufacturer had already, as part of its
high-growth markets strategy, opened plants in Mexico
and Brazil, with projects
under way in Indonesia, Thailand
and China.
Last year Nissan also announced it would be the first global
vehicle manufacturer to build cars in Myanmar,
following the South-East Asian country’s economic restructuring.
The first so-called ‘built-in-Nigeria-for-Nigerians’
Nissan Patrol followed the signing last year of
a memorandum of understanding on local assembly between the Renault-Nissan
Alliance and the West Africa-based Stallion Group.
“For Nissan, Africa
is our strategic growth driver,” said Nissan senior VP and Africa,
Middle East and India
chairperson Takashi Hata.
“Demand for cars is growing quickly in African markets.
By acting quickly to begin production in Nigeria,
we are securing for ourselves first-mover advantage.”
Nissan hoped to double sales in Africa
by the company’s 2016 financial year, up from 110 000 units at the end of the
2012 financial year.
Nissan South Africa (SA) MD Mike Whitfield, who also headed
up Nissan’s sub-Saharan Africa region, said he was delighted
with the assembly of the first Patrol.
“Nissan was a pioneer in the foundation of the car
industry in South Africa. Now we are once again at the
forefront of manufacturing in Africa,
this time in Nigeria where we see huge potential.
“We are grateful to the Nigerian government for
implementing automotive legislation that is conducive to
investment and that was instrumental in our decision to open an assembly plant
in partnership with the Stallion Group, already our exclusive
distributor in Nigeria.”
The roll-out of the first Nissan vehicle came shortly
after confirmation that Nigeria’s economy had overtaken that of South Africa.
Nissan anticipated vehicle demand to increase in the
oil-rich West African country, which was seeing the rapid roll-out of
industries such as finance, retail, communications and film.
In addition to the Patrol,
Nissan also planned to produce the Almera
and NP300, starting in early May, followed by mass production in August.
Nissan SA served South Africa and 42 other countries in sub-Saharan Africa, including Nigeria,
Ghana,
Angola, Kenya and Zambia.
The company would supply Nigeria with assembly kits for the NP300 from its Rosslyn plant, outside Pretoria, where the pickup was assembled.
The company would supply Nigeria with assembly kits for the NP300 from its Rosslyn plant, outside Pretoria, where the pickup was assembled.
I just hope these vehicles would be affordable for average nigerians
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