The
first Chinese cars for sale in Western Europe arrived in the Belgian
port of Antwerp on Tuesday.
Dutch car
dealer Peter Bijvelds said he had already found buyers for the
200 Landwind five-door sports utility vehicles (SUVs) and was
confident of selling about 2,000 of them this year.
A car made by Jiangling Motors Group is on display in the Beijing
International Auto Show in this picture taken on June 6, 2002.
Bijvelds said he was selling the cars, made by Jiangling Landwind
Motor of Jiangling Motors Group, for nearly half the price of
their nearest competitor.
"I
think there's a big market," he told reporters.
Bijvelds
has a five-year exclusive deal with Jiangling to sell the SUVs
in 27 European countries, and said he was holding talks to set
up a distribution network in Belgium before expanding across the
continent.
Priced
at about 17,000 euros ($20,220) after taxes in the Netherlands,
the SUV will be the last thing Europe's car makers want to see
on the road as they grapple with weak consumer spending, high
raw material and fuel costs and relentless price competition.
Bijvelds'
dealership, based in the southeastern Dutch village of Erp, is
making slight alterations to the Chinese vehicles to meet Europe's
strict emissions standards.
One version
of the SUV has a 2.8-litre diesel engine made by General Motors
Corp. . It is also available with a 2-litre or 2.4-litre petrol
engine made by Mitsubishi .
Japan's
Honda Motor Co Ltd began exporting Chinese-made Jazz compacts
to Europe on June 24, but the first shipment of 150 cars will
not arrive until mid-July, a spokesman said.
Honda's
joint venture in Guangzhou with Guangzhou Auto Group Co Ltd and
Dongfeng Motor Group Co Ltd plans to build some 10,000 Jazz units
this year exclusively for export to Europe.
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