A woman examines a Ford Motor Co Focus on display at a dealership in Beijing. With Chinese customers buying Ford vehicles, the automaker is considering building a new plant in Tianjin. [Photo / Agencies]
BEIJING - Ford Motor Co may build a new car plant in northern China after its three-way car venture splits into two separate entities, a newspaper said on Wednesday.
Ford, which makes cars in China with Mazda Motor Corp and Chongqing Changan Automobile Co, operates two plants, one in Chongqing and another in Nanjing.
But Ford and Mazda are awaiting regulatory approval to split their venture into two 50-50 entities with Changan.
After the split, the Nanjing plant, which currently makes Mazda 2, Mazda 3 and Ford's Fiesta compact cars, will belong to the Japanese automaker, the 21st Century Business Herald said, citing unidentified people.
Ford, which aims to sell 1.5 million vehicles annually in China and to have an 8 percent market share by 2015, is considering building a new plant, possibly in Tianjin, it said.
"Certainly, we have ambitious plans to continue to grow in China, the world's largest automotive market, just as we do for the rest of the growing markets in our Asia-Pacific and Africa region. We have nothing to announce at this time, however," the automaker said in a statement.
A Changan spokesman declined to comment.
Ford, the only US-based automaker to have steered clear of a US government bailout and bankruptcy in 2009, is a relative late-comer to China.
However, it has been accelerating its expansion, building its third China car plant in Chongqing, and its second plant - with its partly owned Jiangling Motors Corp - in Jiangxi province.
Ford sold 582,467 vehicles in China last year, with a 3.2 percent market share. Sales in January rose 20 percent year to 53,340 units.
Reuters