Mitsubishi Motors ‘to invest $375m in Indonesia’
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Mitsubishi Motors ‘to invest $375m in Indonesia’

Japanese automaker also reported to be ready to make hybrids in Thailand

A worker assembles a Mitsubishi Pajero at the Japanese automaker’s factory at Bekasi in West Java province of Indonesia. (Photo: Reuters)
A worker assembles a Mitsubishi Pajero at the Japanese automaker’s factory at Bekasi in West Java province of Indonesia. (Photo: Reuters)

JAKARTA: The Japanese carmaker Mitsubishi Motors is planning to invest 5.7 trillion rupiah ($375.25 million) in 2024 to expand its production capacity in Indonesia, the industry ministry said on Wednesday.

The company plans to increase capacity to up to 250,000 units per year in 2024 and to start production of the Minicab-MiEV battery electric vehicle in its plant in Indonesia by the end of this year, according to a statement from the ministry.

Indonesia has been offering incentives to attract investment in production of EVs. The government is considering to remove import duty and value added tax on completely built up (CBU) EVs for companies investing in domestic EV plants, Industry Minister Agus Gumiwang Kartasasmita said.

“We are optimistic that, if implemented, this can boost investment and increase demand to use EVs,” he said.

A Mitsubishi spokesperson said executives from its Tokyo headquarters met on Wednesday with Agus for talks, declining to comment further.

  • The automaker also plans to start production of hybrid vehicles in Thailand early next year, a move that would mark the first time for the company to produce hybrids overseas, Japan’s Nikkei newspaper reported on Wednesday.

Mitsubishi declined to comment on the report.

After suffering a sales crisis in China, Japanese automakers are facing growing competition in Thailand from Chinese rivals, in particular due to Japanese firms’ go-slow approach to EVs.

Mitsubishi has already taken a big hit in China, where its joint venture with Guangzhou Automobile Group (GAC) has cut staff after production of Mitsubishi’s new Outlander sport utility vehicle was halted months after its launch in December.

Mitsubishi reported combined retail and wholesale sales in Southeast Asia of 120,000 vehicles for the three months to June 30, dropping 1.6% from a year earlier.

In Thailand, its retail and wholesale sales slumped to 17,000 units during that period, down from 25,000 a year earlier.

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