Volkswagen Opens Rwanda’s First Car-assembly Plant

Rwanda’s first domestically built car rolled off the assembly line at Volkswagen’s new factory in Kigali on Wednesday as Europe’s biggest carmaker taps into demand for ride-sharing to expand in the region.

Volkswagen’s South Africa boss Thomas Schaefer said on Wednesday at the launch in Kigali that the company would increase production as demand rose.

“Deliveries come in and we put them into production as materials come in and as the demand comes in.

“So if there is a customer who wants a few hundred Passats, we will put them in and build them,” Schaefer said.

He said that the assembly plant used components shipped from South Africa to Rwanda via Kenya.

Despite low levels of car ownership in Rwanda, Volkswagen hopes to both sell vehicles and use them in an Uber-like car-sharing system that would allow people to book rides using their smartphones. Some would also be sold into neighbouring nations.

Volkswagen has started a community car-sharing service mainly aimed at companies in Kigali and plans to launch a ride-hailing offering later in the year.

The Polo is the first model being made at the site and the German automaker plans to reach annual production of 5,000 cars in the first phase, by also building its Passat, Tiguan, Amarok and Teramont models.

The 20 million dollars investment, which will create up to 1,000 jobs, is as an example of much needed spending by overseas firms in the nation, which receives one billion dollars in foreign aid and development assistance but is making business-friendly reforms.

President Paul Kagame, who attended the event, said it was an important step for the country.

“The facility undoubtedly represents a new chapter in Rwanda’s journey of economic transformation.

“I know some might have found it hard to believe that ‘German cars’, as we are used to call them, could really be built in Rwanda.”

Car ownership remains low in the nation of 12 million people with just over 200,000 private cars registered since 1997, according to the country’s tax collection body.

But VW, which already builds in nearby Kenya, is expanding in Sub-Saharan Africa where it hopes it can tap into worldwide growth in demand for using apps to make journeys rather than buying vehicles.

Global ride-sharing companies such as Uber have not yet moved into Rwanda meaning that Volkswagen will get ahead of the game by launching its service there ahead of major rivals.

Most of the cars presently on the road are second-hand imports from countries such as Japan.

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