What's new

Pakistan Automobile Industry

The South Korean KIA Motors has joined hands with Lucky Group to sell and assemble cars in Pakistan. Note here that the joint venture had already started the sale of imported, completely built units (CBU’s) on 1st June 2018.

Note here that the spotted car is second generation Picanto which comes equipped with various engines including 1.0 L Kappa II MPI I3 and 1.25 L Kappa II MPI I4 engine. Moreover, it comes with 5-speed manual transmission and 4-speed automatic CVT transmission. Furthermore, its length is 3,595 mm, width is 1,595 mm and height is 1,490 mm. Additionally, its wheelbase is 2,385 mm.

Internationally, Picanto is available in many countries including Malaysia, Thailand, New Zealand, etc. The second generation Kia Picanto made its debut in 2011 and since then it has also received facelifts. In the local market, its direct competitors are Suzuki Cultus and Suzuki Wagon R.
Pakwheels

FB_IMG_1549621781751.jpg
FB_IMG_1549621777596.jpg
FB_IMG_1549621785852.jpg
 
.
Ghandhara Nissan Ltd GNL to begin rolling out three Nissan models in 2020

“We will begin with the assembly of a 1,200cc Datsun Cross in July 2020 and then roll out the 1,200cc Datsun Go (five seater) and Datsun Go Plus (seven seater) in the next two to three months,” Ghandhara Nissan Ltd (GNL) Project Director and Senior Executive Director Marketing and Sales Muazzam Pervez Khan

The company has also selected at least 22 vendors for making parts of these vehicles,” he added.

Talking about the localisation level in these three variants, he said the company plans to achieve 35-40 per cent indigenisation in the next three years after an initial start of 18pc.

“Prices have so far not been fixed as much will depend on rupee-dollar parity in future,” he said.

“GNL will invest Rs6.5 billion (about $ 47 million) over the first four years,” Khan said, adding that Nissan and GNL would work together to develop Ghandhara facilities at Karachi Port Qasim into a world-class manufacturing plant. The brownfield project would create around 1,800 jobs.

“We have planned to start production of these three vehicles with 15,000 units a year and then will take it up to 35,000 units in the next five years,” Khan added.


51491125_1871942846266738_6547729933978828800_n.jpg


51472371_1871942882933401_4695746783337250816_n.jpg
 
.
We need companies to invest in Gwadar and locations other then Karachi and Lahore.
 
.
What is Pakistan’s car industry good for?

5c5d6034b80b8.jpg


With insufficient local demand and no exports, we need to rethink our automobile policy.

Faizaan Qayyum


The transaction ban on cars has been lifted, at least partially. Commercial imports of cars have been severely restricted. It appears our infamous local automobile manufacturers — err, assemblers — have won.

Let’s be clear here. Imports of cars have not been banned per se — a mechanism to commercially import cars did not exist in the first place. All cars were imported under personal baggage or gift schemes, which have now been tightened.

Cars can now only be imported if all payments, including duties, are made using money earned abroad and remitted through formal banking channels.

These steps are not very surprising in Pakistan’s economic conditions. I wrote previously about how banning transactions in any industry has ripple effects, dragging other sectors of the economy down with it.

We are also very familiar with Pakistan’s chronic trade deficit, driving incessant demand for dollars and putting consistent downward pressures on the rupee.

The macroeconomic compulsion of encouraging local manufacture of cars while restricting imports has finally found its ground in the midst of our fiscal crisis.

The bigger problem with the ban, however, was different. In the form that it existed, prohibiting sales to non-filers disproportionately pushed the poorest buyers out of the market.

Sales figures backed this intuition; vehicles like Ravi, a small commercial van that microentrepreneurs often buy, were hit strongest. With the ban on new registrations now partially lifted for vehicles up to 1300cc, this concern also stands addressed.

The market is therefore open to buyers of vehicles up to 1300cc again. In theory, this removes the disadvantage that the poorest buyers faced. However, one thing is certain: consumers are worse off as a whole, and these policy adjustments are formulated to appease local assemblers more than anything else.

Why do local assemblers need the government to appease them every now and then? The simple answer is, Pakistan’s market for automobiles is too small to merit any serious investment without significant incentives or concrete guarantees.

Consider these numbers, for example: we produce around 200,000 cars a year. With six times the population, India produces more than four million — 20 times as many — cars and more than 20 million two-wheelers.

The next question, then, concerns the success of these markets: what makes a successful car market?

Local demand is part of the answer, including in countries such as India where more than 80 per cent of the production is sold domestically. China and the United States are also large domestic markets that are very attractive opportunities for car manufacturers.

However, the common element in all these countries is a large population with a significant number of people who can afford to buy cars.

The United States, with 325 million people, now averages more than two cars per household. India and China both have populations of over a billion people each, and even with relatively low car ownership rates, their sheer size alone would make them among the biggest markets in the world.

The second part of a successful market involves export potential for automobile production. Thailand, an example I quoted earlier, has a population of less than a third of Pakistan, but produces more than 10 times as many cars.

More than half of them are exported; companies like Toyota, Mitsubishi and even BMW use the country as a regional manufacturing base from where they export to other countries.

It should be clear to us that Pakistan is not a good market on either front. Locally, only 6pc of our households can afford to own a car, bus or truck — with a household size of over six, that is a vehicle ownership rate of less than 1pc.

When I talk of the poorest buyers in the market, even those who buy Mehrans or other low-end cars are among the richest people in the country in relative terms.

And where can we export to?

Under current conditions, we have very little potential in our immediate neighbourhood. China and India, among the world’s biggest markets, produce their own vehicles and are in fact growing in influence as exporters of cars.

Iran also has a fairly robust automobile production industry, producing in excess of one million vehicles every year in spite of the sanctions on the country. Afghanistan worries us more because of cars that are smuggled in from the country, let alone exported to it.

We clearly do not have a market for local production of cars that is both beneficial to local consumers and profitable for manufacturers. The state of our industry and the quality of cars it produces is evidence of this; recent additions of new brands, welcome as they are, seem to be following the same model of incentivised investments, centralised ownership in a few hands, and eventually profiting off the protected market in Pakistan.

These problems are all in addition to the immense environmental and infrastructural costs of private car usage that have been highlighted multiple times before.

Even with only 6pc of Pakistani households owning vehicles, our big cities are already choked. Imagine if all 32 million households in Pakistan were able to afford two cars each: are we really prepared for that at all?

The truth is, private cars present a uniquely double-edged sword for our country. Assembling cars locally creates thousands of jobs, even if the industry has largely been stagnant and devoid of any innovation, entrepreneurship or even the mundane economies of scale and scope associated with long-term establishment.

Car sales also generate revenue for the government through sales and excise taxes, registration charges and other taxes. At the same time, the industry’s consumers are predominantly the richest few.

Yet the government is compelled to protect and incentivise local assemblers for them to operate profitably in a very small market.

Even with our low rate of car ownership, the costs are huge: we spend billions on building infrastructure that enables private cars. We import oil worth billions of dollars, of which almost half is used to power our love for private cars.

In burning these hundreds of thousands of litres of fuel everyday, we create toxic environmental conditions for the poorest of our people: those who must walk, cycle or use other public means to commute, who cannot afford the filtered air through a car’s air-conditioner, and worse, who spend days and nights out on the streets.

At some point we will have to stop and ask ourselves: is it really worth it?

From a scientific and planning perspective, that point has long passed. Yet we are still eagerly attracting new companies in — to assemble private cars, act as protected sources of profit for our seths and make already dysfunctional cities worse by introducing even more cars on the road.

There is no easy way out here. If produce cars we must, we should explore possibilities to eventually export vehicles to neighbouring markets while discouraging their usage locally — think Thailand again, where the prevalence of locally manufactured diesel trucks is widely cited as an environmental crisis which the government is now fighting on an emergent basis.

Better still, instead of cars, we can and should encourage manufacturers of environmentally friendly transit vehicles — buses, vans — to set up shop in Pakistan.

Instead of catering to the 1%, such vehicles can cater to the 99% and their need to travel both within and between places. They are also environmentally safer and reduce the need for infrastructure.

And, interestingly, the potential for export is also higher: most countries (including Thailand!) have followed car-friendly policies similar to ours, and the market for transit vehicles presents unique opportunities that we can compete for.

..............
Faizaan Qayyum is a PhD student at the University of Illinois with research interests in cities, urban economic development and governance. Follow him on Twitter: @faizaanq
 
. .
43266614_512306215951563_2292540546310209536_o.jpg


Atlas Honda, All Set to Launch A New 125CC Motorcycle in Pakistan

The country’s leading bike manufacturer, Atlas Honda, launched a new model of 125cc motorcycle. The bike is a CB 125 F. The company has not shared the date of its availability in the market.

There is no official word about the price of the motorcycle, but experts believe that it will be priced close to Yamaha and Suzuki 125cc offerings. A rough estimate puts it between Rs. 140,000 to Rs. 150,000.

Yamaha already offers different bikes in the surging 125cc category. Suzuki also recently launched its new contender for the category. Atlas Honda now aims to compete against Yamaha in the category with the launch of the new model.









 
.
43266614_512306215951563_2292540546310209536_o.jpg


Atlas Honda, All Set to Launch A New 125CC Motorcycle in Pakistan

The country’s leading bike manufacturer, Atlas Honda, launched a new model of 125cc motorcycle. The bike is a CB 125 F. The company has not shared the date of its availability in the market.

There is no official word about the price of the motorcycle, but experts believe that it will be priced close to Yamaha and Suzuki 125cc offerings. A rough estimate puts it between Rs. 140,000 to Rs. 150,000.

Yamaha already offers different bikes in the surging 125cc category. Suzuki also recently launched its new contender for the category. Atlas Honda now aims to compete against Yamaha in the category with the launch of the new model.









150k [emoji36][emoji36][emoji36] clear cut loot
 
.
CarFirst’s Dost Programme

LAHORE (PR): CarFirst, Pakistan’s leading used car online auction and trading platform, launched their Dost Programme in January, an incentive program open to everyone who wishes to help their friends sell their cars to CarFirst. Over 8000 people signed up for the program within weeks of its launch.

The Dost Program an incentive program is open to every city in Pakistan. Anyone can become a CarFirst Dost by registering online, free of cost and start receiving cash rewards for each car sold to CarFirst via their reference. For the CarFirst Dost, the first car sold with his or her reference gets Rs. 3,000, the second Rs. 9,000, and the first payout is made as soon as the first two cars are purchased. For every subsequent car, the CarFirst Dost will earn Rs. 6,000, with chances of unlocking additional rewards and bonuses by achieving target milestones. Incentives are earned only when the car is purchased by CarFirst.
 
.
Regal Automobile Industries which works under the brand “Prince” is about to launch a 800cc hatchback in May. Prince DFSK which has a technical collaboration with Dongfeng China (DFSK) is already selling LCV’s all over Pakistan with 3S dealerships.The CBU units of 800cc have already been imported in Pakistan and are under test and trail phase. The vehicle is expected to be launched with a price tag of Rs 800,000/-



52265908_1888928144568208_1821815068426240000_n.jpg
 
.
CarFirst’s Dost Programme

LAHORE (PR): CarFirst, Pakistan’s leading used car online auction and trading platform, launched their Dost Programme in January, an incentive program open to everyone who wishes to help their friends sell their cars to CarFirst. Over 8000 people signed up for the program within weeks of its launch.

The Dost Program an incentive program is open to every city in Pakistan. Anyone can become a CarFirst Dost by registering online, free of cost and start receiving cash rewards for each car sold to CarFirst via their reference. For the CarFirst Dost, the first car sold with his or her reference gets Rs. 3,000, the second Rs. 9,000, and the first payout is made as soon as the first two cars are purchased. For every subsequent car, the CarFirst Dost will earn Rs. 6,000, with chances of unlocking additional rewards and bonuses by achieving target milestones. Incentives are earned only when the car is purchased by CarFirst.
Any link pls

Regal Automobile Industries which works under the brand “Prince” is about to launch a 800cc hatchback in May. Prince DFSK which has a technical collaboration with Dongfeng China (DFSK) is already selling LCV’s all over Pakistan with 3S dealerships.The CBU units of 800cc have already been imported in Pakistan and are under test and trail phase. The vehicle is expected to be launched with a price tag of Rs 800,000/-



52265908_1888928144568208_1821815068426240000_n.jpg
I think at the same time govt is allowing more car makers in country, but it should allow, used cars to come to pak too cause tht will generate a compotative market which will make the prices in control of the new car makers?
 
. .
The world is steadily moving towards a sustainable future, and this means that the automobile industry shift will be towards emission-free cars – electric cars. The demand for electric vehicles has significantly increased in the past few years due to its eco-friendly qualities.

According to some stats, the global market for electric cars will reach 35% in the coming two decades. To keep the environment clean and safe and move with the rest of the world, the auto industry of Pakistan will eventually have to shift to the electric vehicles. Anticipating a huge demand in the Pakistani market as well, S.

Zial-ul-Haq & Sons is bringing electric cars to Pakistan.

The group has already imported 4 Units in CBU condition of Chinese battery operated cars “CNEVROVER” brand in Karachi and more units are on the way to Pakistan, which are currently for R&D and testing phase, these are 3.5KW Electric Car, Lithium Battery, 4-passenger, Left Hand-drive.

The company is interested to assemble and manufacturer this car in future in Pakistan. According to Automark’s information from some reliable sources, the company is intended to build an assembly plant in Karachi for the manufacturing and assembling of Cnevrover electric cars.

Electric cars can bring the import bill down considerably in Pakistan as they run on a single electrical motor, not requiring additional costs of oiling and other expenses associated with the engine. The long term benefits of electric cars are many, but the investment needed for these cars to kick off in the market is significant, both on the part of manufacturers and the government.

Specs of the Car

Driven type: Rear drive
Brake system: Hydraulic disc brake
Motor cooling system: Air cooling
Motor: 70V 3.5KW AC
Battery: 12V/120Ah Lead-acid battery 6 pieces
Charging time: 6-8H
Charging type: External type charger, 220V
Controller: 3.5kW PMAC
Distance per charge 120-150kms, base on battery
Brake distance: 5-8 meters
Tire type: 175/70R12 aluminous wheel
Window Power window
Colors White and blue, grey red

above specification may not match with currently imported prducts

©AutoMark

FB_IMG_1550656825708.jpg
FB_IMG_1550656832324.jpg
FB_IMG_1550656814052.jpg
FB_IMG_1550656819951.jpg
 
.
We deserve better quality cars for masses... I have good hopes from kia and hyundai. I hope they launch good cars but there current focus seems to be on sedan and luxury cars so i would keep my fingers crossed.

Over the years i have been seeing Hyundai Eon, i10 and xcent in gulf/asia and they are good entry level cars. They are reliable, safe and with reasonable built quality. If Hyundai launches eon and i10 then eon can overwhelm mehran and i10 alone or i10 launched as basic model plus any one of its variants like i10 grand and i10 sedan will rule the market.
Same way whereas Kia doesn't have a 800 cc car but their picanto (1.0) and Rio hatchback/sedan (1.0, 1.2, 1.4 and 1.6) are exactly what we want in Pakistan. Kia piccanto along with Rio hatchback in 1.0 and 1.2 and Rio sedan in 1.4 and 1.6 are better options than celerio, wagonR, swift and dare i say honda city even.

i also have a jdm as a city car back home and i have deferred my decision to change it with high hopes.
 
.
Pakistan Auto Show

BEIJING: Over 70 Chinese companies will participate and exhibit their products in the three-day Pakistan Auto Show scheduled to be held at Karachi Expo Center from April 12 to 15.

“More than 70 companies manufacturing motorcycles and its different parts and automobiles will showcase their products in the show to be organized by Pakistan Association of Automotive Parts and Accessories,” a senior official at Embassy of Pakistan informed here on Thursday.

He said the government would provide all possible facilities to these companies during the auto show.
 
.
#Regal Automobiles, country’s third largest motorcycle manufacturers who tied up with #DFSK of #China to assemble and sell vehicles under ‘#Prince’ brand name are in process of launching the Pearl Rex7 hatchback in #Pakistan, which will take on the United Bravo in our market.
Pearl Rex7 will be priced lower than United Bravo, ideally between PKR 7.5 to 8.0 lac. However the automatic variant will be priced higher.
D0AbHGqXcAAY1rb.jpg
D0AbICRXQAIsFkq.jpg
D0AbJjXXcAAcBYw.jpg
 
.

Pakistan Affairs Latest Posts

Back
Top Bottom