Carmaker to raise output to 9,60,000 units in 2009-10. |
Japanese auto maker Suzuki Motor Corporation today said it aimed to raise the capacity at its Indian unit, Maruti Udyog, to 9,60,000 in 2009-10 from 6,30,000 this year. |
Maruti had earlier announced the setting up of a new plant with an initial capacity of 1,00,000 a year, which could be scaled up to 2,50,000 a year, raising the eventual capacity to 8,80,000. |
However, the Indian car market leader is known to harbour ambitions of a million in capacity by 2010. |
The expansion in the country is part of a global drive by Suzuki that includes a new ¥60 billion ($520 million) plant in Japan for small cars, to start operating in 2008 with an annual capacity of 2,40,000 units. The company is looking to cash in on a global shift to fuel-efficiency amid record high oil prices. |
The car maker, ranked fourth behind local rivals Toyota Motor, Honda Motor and Nissan Motor, also said at a briefing that it aimed for group revenue of 3 trillion yen in the year to next March, up 7 per cent from its previous forecast and in line with analysts' estimates. |
It said it targeted global output of 3 million units in the business year starting in April 2009, of which domestic output would account for 1.24 million units and overseas 1.76 million. |
It plans to boost the capacity of its car plant in Hungary to 3,00,000 units a year in 2008-09 from 1,60,000 this year and its Pakistan unit's capacity to 1,70,000 in 2009-10 from 1,10,000 now. |