Monday November 13, 11:13 AM
Toyota may build India,China,US plants in 2009-WSJ
TOKYO, Nov 13 (Reuters) - Toyota Motor Corp. will
likely add car factories in India, China and the United States
as early as in 2009, with combined annual output capacity of
450,000 units, the Wall Street Journal reported on Monday.
The factory in India, slated to open in 2009 at the
earliest, will have the capacity to produce 150,000 low-cost
cars a year, the newspaper said, citing the company's internal
medium-term plan.
Japan's top auto maker has been working on developing a
cheap, small car to sell in India and other emerging markets
where most of the vehicle sales growth is expected to occur.
India would be the first country to produce that car, before
Toyota expands production across the globe, the paper said.
Toyota declined to comment on the report.
Under the internal but frequently cited "Global Master
Plan", Toyota is aiming to grab a 15 percent share of the global
car market by 2010, roughly equivalent to 10 million units.
Toyota will also add a second, 100,000 units-a-year car
plant near the southern Chinese city of Guangzhou, where it
began producing a Chinese version of the new-generation Camry
this year, the paper said. Toyota might produce the Yaris
subcompact hatchback, among others, at the plant, WSJ said,
citing engineers and executives.
Toyota is also looking to build and sell the RAV4 and the
Highlander sport utility vehicles in China, although the
location was unclear, the paper said.
With group-based global sales growing at a pace of half a
million cars a year, Toyota has already announced plans to add
at least 560,000 units of production capacity in 2007 alone.
It has been adding factories in North America at a pace of
one per year.
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