Hundreds of robots bend, arch and twist to assemble the body of Cadillac's new flagship CT6. Lasers seal the car's lightweight aluminum exterior using techniques that the carmaker, General Motors (GM), has only just introduced in the United States. Yard-long, bright yellow robots like mechanical Alaskan huskies tow five-foot-tall carts of auto parts to the assembly line.
"It's more along the lines of aircraft technology than traditional, spot-welded steel bodies," said Paul Buetow, GM's head of manufacturing in China, as he strode along the assembly line.
The factory is part of an aggressive expansion by automakers in China, the world's largest market for new cars and the industry's brightest hope for the last 15 years. But the country's economy is now cooling, which could leave carmakers with too many factories and not enough buyers.
GM will open a second, $1-billion factory in Wuhan next year. GM's main rival in the Chinese market, Volkswagen, plans to open large assembly plants next year alongside its existing factories in the cities of Foshan, Ningbo and Yizheng and build one in Qingdao by 2018. Hyundai plans to complete a factory south of Beijing by October and another in Chongqing next year, while Chinese automakers like Great Wall and Changan are aggressively adding capacity.
The research firm Sanford Bernstein estimates that auto manufacturing capacity in China will rise 22 per cent over the next two years, bringing it to 28.8 million cars, minivans and sport utility vehicles annually. That is almost equal to the American and European markets combined, and greater than even the most optimistic forecasts: that sales in China will reach about 25 million next year.
Automakers are expanding at a time when China's economic growth has slowed to its lowest level in more than a quarter-century. China is closing coal mines across the country and plans to shut steel mills. Exports are falling. Many Chinese cities are dotted with empty apartment buildings. Worried about pollution and traffic jams, China's wealthiest metropolises have begun limiting the number of new cars that may be registered.
On the surface, auto sales in China seem strong. More Chinese families can afford cars and are flocking to showrooms. Sales of cars, minivans and sport utility vehicles jumped eight per cent last year from 2014.
The buyers are not just China's college-educated, white-collar elite, but also the beneficiaries of the country's roughly eightfold growth in blue-collar wages in the last dozen years. Zhou Genkou, a burly truck driver, recently waited in a Volkswagen dealership to pay $12,300 for a new white Santana sedan. He explained that he could not tolerate life without a car.
But there are signs that China's yearslong auto boom is easing. After car sales fell three months in a row, the Chinese government decided last September to halve the sales tax on cars with engines of 1.6 litres or less, to five per cent through the end of 2016. The main beneficiaries have been domestic Chinese automakers, mostly affiliated with municipal or provincial governments, that churn out cheap subcompacts with small engines.
A similar tax reduction produced strong sales in 2009 and 2010. But it mainly encouraged consumers to buy sooner. When the tax cut expired, sales essentially levelled off for the next two years.
With the current tax reduction scheduled to end, "2017 will be a very difficult year for the auto industry, probably no growth," said Yale Zhang, the managing director of Automotive Foresight, a Shanghai consulting firm.
Multinationals are focusing more on higher-profit segments that are growing without help from such incentives. But they are also finishing up a factory-building spree that started three years ago, when the economy was healthier.
"We see China moving to a pace of what I would call moderate growth," said Matthew Tsien, the GM executive vice president who oversees the company's China business.
Volkswagen forecasts that China's auto market will grow slightly faster than the overall economy this year and slightly slower than the overall economy for the rest of the decade. GM is forecasting that the market will grow a little less than five per cent a year through the end of the decade, the equivalent of adding the entire auto market of Japan, or five Australias.
Both automakers are planning to meet much of that growth with factories they have already commissioned or will soon finish. But if the economy weakens significantly, the industry could get stuck with a large amount of excess capacity.
"Are manufacturers going to keep the rose-coloured glasses or get real? Most of the multinationals are going to get real and slow down the new capacity," said Bill Russo, former chief executive of Chrysler China and now a consultant. "I'm not sure about the local manufacturers. They have a 'Field of Dreams' and 'build it and they will come' mentality."
Chinese auto industry leaders shrug off such concerns. "They see the small-car market as having a lot of potential," said Cui Dongshu, the secretary general of the China Passenger Car Association.
The Chinese economy needs continued strength in the auto market. The government wants to shift to a new, more sustainable model for growth based on consumer spending.
Since 2009, China has depended heavily on a loan-fed surge in construction of ever more highways, rail lines, factories and other investments. But that has produced a mountain of debt, particularly at state-owned enterprises.
Strong auto sales helped China attain a little-noticed milestone in recent months. Overall retail sales of consumer goods in China surpassed such sales in the United States, according to official data.
If sales do slow sharply, the question is whether multinationals and domestic automakers will try to start exporting more from their Chinese factories. The facilities are among the most advanced in the world, not least because they are also the newest.
GM and other automakers could in theory try to export more cars to the United States, which is also a relatively healthy market. One potential obstacle, however, is that China's surplus capacity is mainly in sub-compact cars, for which Americans have little appetite.
The preferences of Chinese consumers tend to be different from those of American buyers. Chinese customers, for example, are highly prone to complain if fabrics and other materials in a car's interior do not smell quite right, according to surveys by J D Power & Associates.
© 2016 The New York Times News Service