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Volkswagen Builds Factory in
Tennessee, USA
Initial stage of construction in
Chattanooga to create capacity for 150,000 vehicles.
Wolfsburg / Chattanooga -
Volkswagen is setting out to build a plant in Chattanooga,
Tennessee, where vehicle production will be due to commence in
early 2011. The supervisory board of Volkswagen AG today
approved the plans and an investment volume of up to 1 billion
USD (around 620 million euro). The Group’s management board had
previously pinpointed Chattanooga as the site for its new plant.
“The USA market,” said Prof Martin Winterkorn, CEO of Volkswagen
AG, “is an important part of our volume strategy and we are now
very resolutely accessing that market. Volkswagen will be
extremely active there.”
The first stage of construction is
designed to provide annual capacity for the complete production
of 150,000 automobiles, including body-production, paint-shop
and assembly operations. A cutting-edge modular production
system at the plant will enable maximum flexibility. The first
vehicle to be manufactured there will be a new midsize sedan
tailored specifically to the US market. Volkswagen itself will
employ a staff of approximately 2000 at the site over the medium
term, while additional jobs will be created in the supplier and
logistics sectors.
"This plant represents a milestone
in Volkswagen’s growth strategy," says Prof Winterkorn. "We will
be selling 800,000 Volkswagen p.a. in the USA by 2018, and this
new site will play a key role." Volkswagen says the plant will
help to permanently alleviate exchange-rate fluctuations. "This,
along with our growth strategy, is a prerequisite for the
economic success of the company in the dollar region." That
success apparently includes having customers in the US come to
perceive the company as a domestic manufacturer.
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