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REUTERS / AFP
ESIPOVO, Russia
German automaker Daimler officially opened a Mercedes-Benz factory near Moscow on Wednesday at a ceremony attended by President Vladimir Putin, marking a rare foreign investment into Russia’s car industry.
The plant in the town of Esipovo 40 kilometers north west of Moscow is the first in years to be opened by a foreign carmaker in Russia where investment into the once burgeoning auto industry dried up amid western sanctions and a stagnant economy.
Speaking at the inaugural ceremony, Putin said the plant would produce 25,000 cars a year and that investment in the project had totalled 19 billion roubles ($291 million).
Putin said the factory, built after Daimler signed a deal with Russia’s authorities in early 2017, would employ almost 1,000 people.
“We will support such projects in the future for sure,” said Putin.
“Mercedes cars will be popular with Russian consumers for sure,” Putin said, adding that he has driven a Mercedes.
Most global automakers opened plants in Russia in the first half of the 2000s, but after peaking in 2012 car sales slumped to a ten-year low of 1.42 million in 2016. The market is picking up again, and a total of 1.8 million cars were sold last year.
Last week, US carmaker Ford said it would close two assembly plants in Russia after deciding to stop making passenger cars there due to poor car sales. However Mercedes-Benz, as with many other high-end brands, has weathered the Russian crisis.
German-Russian trade amounted to 61.9 billion euros (over $69.5 billion) in 2018, according to Berlin’s economy ministry.
ESIPOVO, Russia
German automaker Daimler officially opened a Mercedes-Benz factory near Moscow on Wednesday at a ceremony attended by President Vladimir Putin, marking a rare foreign investment into Russia’s car industry.
The plant in the town of Esipovo 40 kilometers north west of Moscow is the first in years to be opened by a foreign carmaker in Russia where investment into the once burgeoning auto industry dried up amid western sanctions and a stagnant economy.
Speaking at the inaugural ceremony, Putin said the plant would produce 25,000 cars a year and that investment in the project had totalled 19 billion roubles ($291 million).
Putin said the factory, built after Daimler signed a deal with Russia’s authorities in early 2017, would employ almost 1,000 people.
“We will support such projects in the future for sure,” said Putin.
“Mercedes cars will be popular with Russian consumers for sure,” Putin said, adding that he has driven a Mercedes.
Most global automakers opened plants in Russia in the first half of the 2000s, but after peaking in 2012 car sales slumped to a ten-year low of 1.42 million in 2016. The market is picking up again, and a total of 1.8 million cars were sold last year.
Last week, US carmaker Ford said it would close two assembly plants in Russia after deciding to stop making passenger cars there due to poor car sales. However Mercedes-Benz, as with many other high-end brands, has weathered the Russian crisis.
German-Russian trade amounted to 61.9 billion euros (over $69.5 billion) in 2018, according to Berlin’s economy ministry.