Scania, the world's leading heavy vehicle maker, eyes Beijing's green
Olympics drive as an opportunity to pry open the Chinese market for its
ethanol-powered buses, the company's top manager told Xinhua on Wednesday.
"I think Beijing will solve the problem of pollution. It has to do with
rapid, very very rapid expansion of the city. If we can give a contribution to
that, we are very happy to do that," Leif Ostling, president and chief executive
of the Sweden-based company, said when asked about the company's plan to sell
its ethanol-powered buses to China.
Currently, there is already one ethanol-powered bus produced by Scania in
China, which is scheduled to make its debut show in the streets of Beijing as a
field test during the first week of November, less than one year before the city
hosts 2008 Olympic Games.
Ostling said he hopes their environment-friendly buses could catch up with
the Olympic Games.
Due to the green Olympics drive, "the environmental quest is much more under
focus by the authorities in China than it was justa couple of years ago,"
Ostling said, "I think it is part of our interest for the ethanol bus being
tested in Beijing. We want to see what we can deliver."
Fredrik Morsing, director of Scania's alternative fuels, buses and coaches,
said the company was in contact with the Beijing organizing committee for the
Olympic Games, but he refused to say whether they have found potential
customers.
"The Olympic Games would be a very good occasion for us to show the
technology we could produce. That's one of the purposes why we want to bring a
bus to Beijing," Morsing said.
As one of the world's leading manufacturers of trucks and buses for heavy
transport uses and specialized in ethanol-powered vehicles, Scania has made
cautious steps into the Chinese market, one of the most tempting place for
foreign investment today. It established a global strategic partnership with
China's Higer Bus Company in Suzhou, but not its own factory.
Ostling, who was in Brussels as the host for a high-level conference on
sustainable transport, said at present they are simply making the test of the
Chinese market, and if there is enough demand, they are ready to jump in.
"We don't have manufacturing presence in China. It's not on the agenda today.
What we are doing now is that we are gradually building up market in various
cities of China and also finding customers to our products," he said, "When we
see prospects in the market, then we will definitely establish manufacturing
operation in China."
Ostling said once they have their trucks and buses built in China, the
company would like to set up a wholly owned subsidiary, instead of cooperation
with local manufacturers.
"We want one hundred percent ownership. We want no joint venture," he said,
"We always go for one hundred percent ownership. That's a policy of the
company."