Sunday, 11 March 2012

Automotive industry


The automotive industry designs, develops, manufactures, markets, and sells motor vehicles, and is one of the world's most important economic sectors by revenue.
The term automotive industry usually does not include industries dedicated to automobiles after delivery to the customer, such as repair shops and motor fuel filling stations.

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[edit]History

The first practical automobile with a petrol engine was built by Karl Benz in 1885 in Mannheim, Germany. Benz was granted a patent for his automobile on 29 January 1886, and began the first production of automobiles in 1888, after Bertha Benz, his wife, had proved with the first long-distance trip in August 1888 (104 km (65 mi) from Mannheim to Pforzheim and back) that the horseless coach was absolutely suitable for daily use. Since 2008 a Bertha Benz Memorial Route commemorates this event.
Soon after, in 1889, Gottlieb Daimler and Wilhelm Maybach in Stuttgart designed a vehicle from scratch to be an automobile, rather than a horse-drawn carriage fitted with an engine. They also are usually credited as inventors of the first motorcycle, the Daimler Reitwagen, in 1885, but Italy's Enrico Bernardi, of the University of Padua, in 1882, patented a 0.024 horsepower (17.9 W) 122 cc(7.4 cu in) one-cylinder petrol motor, fitting it into his son's tricycle, making it at least a candidate for the first automobile, and first motorcycle.[1]:p.26 Bernardi enlarged the tricycle in 1892 to carry two adults.[1]:p.26
Until 2005, the U.S.A. led the world in total automobile production. In 1929 before the Great Depression, the world had 32,028,500 automobiles in use, and the US automobile industry produced over 90% of them. At that time the U.S. had one car per 4.87 persons.[2] In 2006, Japan narrowly passed the U.S. in production and held this rank until 2009, when China took the top spot with 13.8 million units. By producing 18.3 million units in 2010, China produced nearly twice the number of second place Japan (9.6 million units), with the U.S. in third place with 7.8 million units.[3]

[edit]Economy

Around the world, there were about 806 million cars and light trucks on the road in 2007, consuming over 260 billion US gallons (980,000,000 m3) of gasoline and diesel fuel yearly.[4] The automobile is a primary mode of transportation for many developed economies. The Detroit branch of Boston Consulting Group predicts that, by 2014, one-third of world demand will be in the four BRIC markets (Brazil, Russia, India and China). Other potentially powerful automotive markets are Iran and Indonesia.[5] Emerging auto markets already buy more cars than established markets. According to a J.D. Power study, emerging markets accounted for 51 percent of the global light-vehicle sales in 2010. The study expects this trend to accelerate.[6][7]

[edit]World motor vehicle production

[edit]By year

Global production of motorvehicles
(cars and commercial vehicles)
YearProductionChangeSource
199754,434,000 [8]
199852,987,000-2.7%[8]
199956,258,8926.2%[9]
200058,374,1623.8%[10]
200156,304,925-3.5%[11]
200258,994,3184.8%[12]
200360,663,2252.8%[13]
200464,496,2206.3%[14]
200566,482,4393.1%[15]
200669,222,9754.1%[16]
200773,266,0615.8%[17]
200870,520,493-3.7%[18]
200961,791,868-12.4%[19]
201077,857,70526.0%[20]

[edit]By country

[edit]By manufacturer


[edit]Company relationships

It is common for automobile manufacturers to hold stakes in other automobile manufacturers. These ownerships can be explored under the detail for the individual companies.
Notable current relationships include:[citation needed]

[edit]Top vehicle manufacturing groups by volume

The table below shows the world's largest motor vehicle manufacturing groups, along with the marques produced by each one. The table is ranked by 2010 end of year production figures from theInternational Organization of Motor Vehicle Manufacturers (OICA)[21] for the parent group, and then alphabetically by marque. Joint ventures are not reflected in this table. Production figures of joint ventures are typically included in OICA rankings, which can become a source of controversy.[22][23]
MarqueCountry of originOwnershipMarkets
1. Toyota Motor Corporation ( Japan)
LexusJapanDivisionGlobal
ScionUnited StatesDivisionNorth America
ToyotaJapanDivisionGlobal
DaihatsuJapanSubsidiaryGlobal, except North America and Australia
HinoJapanSubsidiaryAsia Pacific, North America and South America
2. General Motors Company ( United States)
BuickUnited StatesDivisionNorth America, China, Israel, Taiwan
CadillacUnited StatesDivisionNorth America, Europe, Asia, Middle East, Africa
ChevroletUnited StatesDivisionGlobal, except Australia, New Zealand
GMCUnited StatesDivisionNorth America, Middle East
HoldenAustraliaSubsidiaryAustralia, New Zealand
OpelGermanySubsidiaryGlobal, except North America, United Kingdom
VauxhallUnited KingdomSubsidiaryUnited Kingdom
3. Volkswagen Group AG ( Germany)
AudiGermanySubsidiaryGlobal
BentleyUnited KingdomDivisionGlobal
BugattiFranceDivisionGlobal
LamborghiniItalySubsidiaryGlobal
MANGermanySubsidiaryGlobal
PorscheGermanySubsidiaryGlobal
ScaniaSwedenDivisionGlobal
SEATSpainDivisionEurope, South America, North Africa, Middle East
ŠkodaCzech RepublicDivisionGlobal, except North America, Japan and South Africa
VolkswagenGermanyDivisionGlobal
Volkswagen Commercial VehiclesGermanyDivisionGlobal
4. Hyundai Motor Group ( South Korea)
HyundaiSouth KoreaDivisionGlobal
KiaSouth KoreaDivisionGlobal, except Mexico
5. Ford Motor Company ( United States)
FordUnited StatesDivisionGlobal
LincolnUnited StatesDivisionNorth America, Middle East, Japan, South Korea
TrollerBrazilSubsidiaryLatin America, Africa
6. Nissan ( Japan)
InfinitiUnited StatesDivisionGlobal, except Japan, South America and Africa
NissanJapanDivisionGlobal
7. Honda Motor Company ( Japan)
AcuraUnited StatesDivisionNorth America, China
HondaJapanDivisionGlobal
8. PSA Peugeot Citroën S.A. ( France)
CitroënFranceSubsidiaryGlobal, except North America, South Asia
PeugeotFranceSubsidiaryGlobal, except North America, South Asia
9. Suzuki Motor Corporation ( Japan)
SuzukiJapanDivisionGlobal
Maruti SuzukiIndiaSubsidiaryIndia, Middle East, South America
10. Renault ( France)
DaciaRomaniaSubsidiaryEurope, Latin America, Africa, Asia, except Japan
RenaultFranceDivisionGlobal, except North America, South Korea
Renault SamsungSouth KoreaSubsidiarySouth America, Asia, except Japan and China
11. Fiat S.p.A. ( Italy)
AbarthItalySubsidiaryGlobal
Alfa RomeoItalySubsidiaryGlobal, except North America
FerrariItalySubsidiaryGlobal
FiatItalySubsidiaryGlobal
LanciaItalySubsidiaryEurope and Japan (except UK and Republic of Ireland)
MaseratiItalySubsidiaryGlobal
12. Daimler AG ( Germany)
FreightlinerUnited StatesDivisionNorth America, South Africa, Australia, New Zealand
MasterPakistanSubsidiaryPakistan
MaybachGermanyDivisionGlobal
Mercedes-BenzGermanyDivisionGlobal
Mitsubishi FusoJapanSubsidiaryGlobal
OrionCanadaSubsidiaryNorth America
SetraGermanySubsidiaryEurope
SmartGermanyDivisionGlobal
Thomas BuiltUnited StatesSubsidiaryNorth America
Western StarUnited StatesSubsidiaryNorth America, Australia, New Zealand
13. Chrysler Group, LLC ( United States)
ChryslerUnited StatesDivisionGlobal, UK and Republic of Ireland, except Europe
DodgeUnited StatesDivisionGlobal, except Europe
JeepUnited StatesDivisionGlobal
RamUnited StatesDivisionNorth America, South America, Middle East
14. BMW AG ( Germany)
BMWGermanyDivisionGlobal
MINIUnited KingdomDivisionGlobal
Rolls-RoyceUnited KingdomSubsidiaryGlobal
15. Mazda Motor Corporation ( Japan)
MazdaJapanDivisionGlobal
16. Mitsubishi Motors Corporation ( Japan)
MitsubishiJapanDivisionGlobal
17. Chana Automobile Company, Ltd ( People's Republic of China)
ChanaChinaDivisionChina, South Africa, Europe
18. Tata Motors, Ltd ( India)
HispanoSpainSubsidiaryEurope
JaguarUnited KingdomSubsidiaryGlobal
Land RoverUnited KingdomSubsidiaryGlobal
TataIndiaDivisionGlobal, except North America
Tata DaewooSouth KoreaSubsidiarySouth Korea
19. First Automotive Group Corporation ( People's Republic of China)
BesturnChinaDivisionChina
FreewindChinaSubsidiaryChina
HaimaChinaSubsidiaryChina
HongqiChinaDivisionChina
JiaxingChinaSubsidiaryChina
VitaChinaSubsidiaryChina
XialiChinaSubsidiaryChina
20. Geely Automobile ( People's Republic of China)
GeelyChinaDivisionChina, Russia, North Africa
MapleChinaDivisionChina
Volvo (Cars)SwedenSubsidiaryGlobal
21. Chery Automobile Company, Ltd ( People's Republic of China)
CheryChinaDivisionChina, Africa, South East Asia, Russia
RiichChinaDivisionChina
RelyChinaDivisionChina
22. Fuji Heavy Industries, Ltd ( Japan)
SubaruJapanDivisionGlobal
23. Dongfeng Motor Corporation ( People's Republic of China)
DongfengChinaDivisionChina
24. Beijing Automotive Industry Holding Corporation, Ltd ( People's Republic of China)
BAWChinaDivisionChina
FotonChinaSubsidiaryChina
25. OAO AvtoVAZ ( Russia)
LadaRussiaDivisionGlobal, except North America and Portugal
26. BYD Auto ( People's Republic of China)
BYDChinaDivisionChina, Russia
27. Isuzu Motors, Ltd ( Japan)
IsuzuJapanDivisionGlobal, except North America
28. Anhui Jianghuai Automobile Company, Ltd ( People's Republic of China)
JACChinaDivisionChina
29. Brilliance China Automotive Holding, Ltd ( People's Republic of China)
BrillianceChinaDivisionChina, North Africa
JinbeiChinaSubsidiaryChina
30. Great Wall Motor Company, Ltd ( People's Republic of China)
Great WallChinaDivisionChina, South Africa, Russia, North Africa, Australia
31. Shanghai Automotive Industry Corporation ( People's Republic of China)
MG MotorUnited KingdomSubsidiaryChina, United Kingdom, Chile, Argentina
RoeweChinaDivisionChina
SoyatChinaDivisionChina
YuejinChinaDivisionChina
32. Mahindra & Mahindra, Ltd ( India)
MahindraIndiaDivisionIndia, South East Asia, Europe, North Africa, North America, Australia
SsangYongSouth KoreaSubsidiaryGlobal
33. Hafei Motor ( China)
HafeiChinaSubsidiaryChina
34. AB Volvo ( Sweden)
MackUnited StatesSubsidiaryGlobal
Nissan DieselJapanSubsidiaryGlobal
NovaBusCanadaSubsidiaryNorth America
PrevostCanadaSubsidiaryNorth America
Renault TrucksFranceSubsidiaryGlobal, except Japan
Volvo TrucksSwedenDivisionGlobal
35. Jiangxi Changhe Automobile ( China)
ChangheChinaDivisionChina
36. Qingling Motors Company Ltd. ( China)
QinglingChinaDivisionChina
37. Proton Holdings, Bhd ( Malaysia)
ProtonMalaysiaDivisionAsia Pacific (except Japan and South Africa), United Kingdom, Middle East
LotusUnited KingdomSubsidiaryGlobal
38. Hunan Jiangnan Automobile ( People's Republic of China)
JiangnanChinaDivisionChina
39. Chongqing Lifan Automobile Company, Ltd ( People's Republic of China)
LifanChinaDivisionChina
40. Fujian Motor Industry Group Company ( People's Republic of China)
SoueastChinaDivisionChina
41. Kuozui Motors, Ltd ( Taiwan)
KuozuiRepublic of ChinaSubsidiaryTaiwan
42. Shandong Kaima ( China)
KaimaChinaDivisionChina
JubaoChinaDivisionChina
AofengChinaDivisionChina
43. Chenzhou Gonow Nanyan Chifeng Vehicle ( People's Republic of China)
GonowChinaDivisionChina
44. Ziyang Nanjun Automobile Co., Ltd. ( People's Republic of China)
NanjunChinaDivisionChina
45. Rongcheng Huatai Motor ( People's Republic of China)
HuataiChinaDivisionChina

[edit]Minor automotive manufacturers

There are many automobile manufacturers other than the major global companies. They are mostly regional or operating in niche markets.

[edit]See also

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