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Make In India: Half of BMW Components Now Sourced Locally

Half of BMW Components In India Now Sourced From Local Players
India's retired cricket star Sachin Tendulkar, center, fixes a gear shift to an engine as he assembles a BMW 5 Series at BMW's manufacturing facility on the outskirts of Chennai, India.
ASSOCIATED PRESS
India's retired cricket star Sachin Tendulkar, center, fixes a gear shift to an engine as he assembles a BMW 5 Series at BMW's manufacturing facility on the outskirts of Chennai, India.

German luxury car maker BMW today said the localisation level in the cars it makes in India has reached up to 50 percent and it plans to introduce 15 new models this year.

Cricket legend Sachin Tendulkar marked the occasion at the company's manufacturing unit at Mahindra World City, Singaperumalkovil near here, by formally assembling a BMW 5 Series car using parts from Indian auto-component suppliers.

The company said 50 percent of the 2,800 parts used in this series are now produced locally. BMW began operations at the Chennai plant on March 29, 2007. Since then, the group has strengthened its commitment to the Indian market and has continuously increased the number of locally produced car models.

Eight car models are produced on two assembly lines at the BMW Plant Chennai plant -- 1 Series, 3 Series, 3 Series Gran Turismo, 5 Series, 7 Series, X1, X3, and X5. "In 2015 we will expand our product range and cover all the opportunity available in the luxury car segment. This year we will launch 15 new products along with i8 launched in January. We will also launch 1 Series, 3 Series, (new models)," BMW Group India President, Philipp von Sahr told reporters. "Till date, BMW Group has increased investments to Rs 4.9 billion (Rs 490 crore) in BMW India from Rs 3.9 billion."

BMW activities in India include the manufacturing plant in Chennai, a parts warehouse in Chennai, a training Centre in Gurgaon. The company has 40 sales outlet in India.

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