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Paris Orders Renault To Make New Models In France

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  • Paris Orders Renault To Make New Models In France

    PARIS ORDERS RENAULT TO MAKE NEW MODELS IN FRANCE
    By Ben Hall in Paris

    FT
    January 13 2010 16:07

    The French government has ordered Renault, the country's second-largest
    carmaker, to keep production of its new Clio small car in France
    rather than shift it to lower-cost Turkey.

    Renault has come under fire from the French government - which holds
    a 15 per cent stake - after it emerged the company was considering
    making its future Clio IV model at its factory at Bursa in Turkey,
    rather than at Flins, near Paris.

    EDITOR'S CHOICE In depth: Detroit auto show - Jan-13Scrappage
    scheme sends French sales to 20-year high - Dec-29Renault drives
    down a new avenue with electric cars - Dec-18Carlos Ghosn, Renault's
    chief executive, and Patrick Pelata, chief operating officer, have
    been summoned to the Elysee palace later in the week to explain the
    carmaker's strategy to President Nicolas Sarkozy.

    Mr Pelata said on Wednesday no decision had yet been made on where to
    produce the Clio IV. He said the Clio would still be made at Flins,
    although he did not specify whether this mean the Clio IV or older
    versions.

    Mr Pelata also said that Renault would cease production of Clios at
    Valladolid in Spain and Novo Mesto in Slovenia. That decision could
    rekindle concern in the EU that France is inducing the company to
    favour French assembly plants over others elsewhere in the bloc in
    potential breach of the single market. It is not clear, however,
    whether Spain or Slovenia were ever in line to produce the new Clio IV.

    The French government's strong opposition to the production of the
    Clio in Turkey is likely to go down badly in Ankara, which is already
    fuming at French opposition to Turkish membership of the EU.

    Christian Estrosi, industry minister, made clear on Wednesday the
    government would not tolerate the so-called delocalising of the
    Clio IV which was likely to be sold in large numbers in France when
    production started in 2013.

    After a meeting with Mr Pelata, Mr Estrosi said: "I made clear to
    him that we're not in favour of producing the Clio IV in Turkey. It
    would seem that our message has been understood."

    Mr Estrosi said it was "the will of the state that should be respected
    in Renault's future choices".

    Mr Estrosi said even if Flins was at full capacity making electric
    cars, the Clio IV should be assembled at another, unspecified site
    in France.

    He said it was the French government's duty to ensure that French
    carmakers - big recipients of state aid last year - maintained or
    even increased car production in France.

    Renault received ~@3bn in favourable loans from the government last
    year, has benefited from France's ~@600m scrappage scheme, and was set
    to see its tax bill cut under a reform of local business levies. It
    will also get ~@250m in government aid to produce electric cars and
    batteries at its Flins site.

    Renault has been criticised by the government and unions for shifting
    production of its smaller cars abroad even if these are destined for
    the French market. Renault has done so because production of small
    cars with small margins is barely profitable in France.

    The unions complain that only 25 per cent of Renault units are now
    made in France. Mr Pelata said that 55 per cent of production by
    added value was still based in Renault's home market.

    The French government's criticism of Renault's production plans is
    unlikely to serve the interests of other French groups keen to expand
    their activities in Turkey.

    Years of acrimony over French laws on denial of Armenian genocide
    and Mr Sarkozy's strident opposition to Turkey's EU bid had already
    taken their toll on commercial relations, keeping Gaz de France out
    of the Nabucco pipeline consortium (in 2007) and leading some Turks
    to avoid French-branded consumer goods.

    Spurred by corporate lobbying, Paris had recently been working to
    smooth bilateral relations, hosting an official visit by Turkish
    president Abdullah Gul in the autumn in which both sides were careful
    to avoid awkward public references to Turkey's European aspirations.

    Additional reporting by Delphine Strauss in Ankara

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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