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Automotive Intelligence - the web for automotive professionals and car enthusiasts |
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March 12, 2008 This Week:
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"The boost in production capacity will positively impact the logistics, suppliers and distribution networks that support the manufacturing processes," said Josef Kerscher, President of BMW Manufacturing Co. While the supplier network may grow, existing supplier companies will ramp up operations to provide automotive parts for the higher production levels, doubling parts container traffic and significantly increasing exports through the Port of Charleston. When the BMW Group announced in 1992 that it would build its first full manufacturing facility outside of Germany in South Carolina, it put forward some ambitious plans. The company was looking to invest US$ 600 million. Its aim was to create 2,000 new jobs and attract at least nine suppliers to the state by the year 2000. Reality far exceeded the company's expectations. BMW was employing more than 3,000 people at Spartanburg in 2000, and by 2004 that number had grown to more than 4,600. As 2007 dawned, the number of on-site workforce had grown to more than 5,400. BMW has invested US$ 3.5 billion in its South Carolina operations to date. Taking the US$ 750 million of new money into account, the US$ 600 million originally pledged has now swollen to total investment of some US$ 4.2 billion. The nine new suppliers in South Carolina aimed for in the company's original plans have now become 52. Of those, 40 chose the state explicitly because of the presence of the BMW plant. BMW's North American supplier network has grown from 22 in 1992 to 194 companies today. The success of local manufacturing in the USA is highlighted by the company's rising production and sales figures. Vehicle production at the Spartanburg plant has grown from 429 vehicles in 1994 - the first year of production - to 157,530 units in 2007. In the same period the BMW Group's sales volumes in the United States increased from 65,000 to 335,000 units. Photo: BMW (March 10, 2008)
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