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Strategies & Market Trends : 2026 TeoTwawKi ... 2032 Darkest Interregnum -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: daddunes who wrote (1860)11/4/2005 11:11:50 PM
From: elmatador  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 217791
 
Hi Dadunnes! What can be very important to a certain group my not be for others side that group. If a person outside that group emits an opinion, it does't necessarily, follow that he has envy.

I drive what the company give me to do my work. My wife drives a Fiat Marea in Brazil.

My postings tries to show that:

The market for small cars will grow.

The market for biodiesel and thanol powered cars will grow.

The market for big cars and SUV's will vanish

FORD and GM are history and will merge.

The only SUV I drove (apart form a Blazer in the US) was a Toyota Landcruiser in Nigeria. For that place it was wonderful. I wouldn't use in any urban developed country.

At Motorola I used to hear my friend ( not a kid but a 40 year old) speaking about his huge pick up truck and how he used to overtake up hill those smaller cars...

It is a typical American thing. It is not like that all over the world. Cars are not exactly object of desire or machismo all over the place.



To: daddunes who wrote (1860)11/5/2005 12:08:45 AM
From: TobagoJack  Respond to of 217791
 
you don't mean the few thousand downed in mesopotamia, do you, youngsters, I meant?

envy? of what? get real, no envy here.

too funny

oh, before i sign off, here is a tale of two futures worldmarket.blogspot.com , told in genuine mirth and not forced LOL



To: daddunes who wrote (1860)11/5/2005 12:51:46 AM
From: elmatador  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 217791
 
Before SUVs change: Ford to help increase ethanol fuel stations

>>The company plans to make 250-thousand ethanol-capable vehicles next year. They include the Ford F-150 pickup, Ford Crown Victoria, Mercury Grand Marquis and Lincoln Town Car.<<

DETROIT Ford Motor Company is teaming up with an energy company to increase the number of ethanol fuel stations next year.

Ford officials say they will work with VeraSun Energy Corporation to covert fuel pumps to E-85, an alternative fuel made from 85 percent ethanol and 15 percent gasoline.

Ford will announce the number of stations and their location at a later date. Ford plans to add less than 100 fuel stations in the Midwest, where ethanol is readily available because it's distilled from corn and grain.

Only about 500 of the 180-thousand fuel stations in the U-S offer E-85.

Ford also says it will launch an awareness campaign about the benefits of ethanol.

The company plans to make 250-thousand ethanol-capable vehicles next year. They include the Ford F-150 pickup, Ford Crown Victoria, Mercury Grand Marquis and Lincoln Town Car.

Copyright 2005 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.



To: daddunes who wrote (1860)11/5/2005 2:14:56 AM
From: elmatador  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 217791
 
Brazilian envy: GM shifts engineer positions to Brazil
By Kenneth Rapoza
SPECIAL TO THE WASHINGTON TIMES
Published June 29, 2005

SAO CAETANO do SUL, Brazil -- General Motors in Brazil is hiring, as the U.S. and Europe lay off autoworkers.

Some of GM's engineering work in the U.S. will be transferred to its plants in Brazil and South Korea as part of a massive cost-cutting measure that will eliminate an estimated 6,250 jobs a year between now and 2008.


"We're not part of the problem. We're part of the solution," said Pedro Manuchakian, vice president of General Motors' Latin America, Africa and Middle East division, known by the acronym LAAM. Mr. Manuchakian is also engineering director of General Motors do Brasil Ltda.

GM expects to save from $1 billion to $2 billion a project by relying on lower-cost production facilities. Roughly 65 percent of a new car's cost comes from building and designing the frame.

"The global strategy of General Motors Corp. is to move some of the engineering work away from high-cost centers to low-cost centers. Their loss is our gain in the region. But we benefit the corporation by reducing costs. It's a two-way street."

GM Brazil expects to add more than 200 engineers to its current ranks of 660 between now and 2010. It hired 150 last year. The average engineer earns 5,000 Brazilian reals per month, or roughly $2,080. That's five times more than the average monthly income in Sao Paulo.

In the U.S., GM's senior project managers, who are engineers, make $92,000 a year, while manufacturing and industrial engineers make $59,000 to $62,000, according to the Vault, a service that surveys company salaries.

GM in Brazil has 19,000 employees, up from 17,000 two years ago.

"When it comes to engineering, General Motors is becoming Global Motors," Mr. Manuchakian said.

With GM planning to reduce its car platforms from 27 to 15, Mr. Manuchakian, a 33-year veteran, said he expects American engineers to be relocated to engineering hubs like Brazil or lose their jobs.

The automobile industry in Brazil has performed well, despite frequent union disputes, high interest rates and stagnant income.

Two years ago, the sector employed 92,000 workers. Today, carmakers employ more than 104,000 people. South of Sao Paulo, in Parana state, 10,000 auto-sector jobs have been created since 2000.

Brazil produces about 2.2 million cars per year, compared with a fairly stagnant 12 million in the U.S. From January to May, Brazil produced 984,800 cars compared with 851,600 a year earlier.

Under GM's new system, five countries, including Brazil, will be in charge of creating the company's automobiles. When Brazil is chosen as lead designer, engineers from the U.S., Europe, Australia and South Korea would participate only to add their opinions about regional tastes.

The U.S. also could be chosen as lead designer on a project, collaborating with engineers from low-income nations.

"So Brazil might have one or two vehicles to develop for the corporation, South Korea might have two, Europe and the U.S. will have some. In some cases, we'll be making a car that the U.S. used to make from start to finish. This is all new," Mr. Manuchakian said.

Brazilian engineers will design the new, smaller Hummer 3 this year.</b (An ethanol powered Hummer perhaps).</b Then, the Hummer 3 will leave Brazil for South Africa, where assemblers will prepare it for the European export markets in 2006.

Although the U.S. still will manufacture its own version of the Hummer, new and better-selling GM vehicles will be made by engineers from other countries under a global engineering project led by GM Vice President James Queen.

That means American-made trucks like the Chevrolet S-10 pickup could be entirely drawn up and designed in Brazil and exported to the U.S., Mr. Manuchakian said.

The LAAM market expects to grow about 5 percent annually. Asia Pacific, thanks to China, is expecting double-digit growth.

"If you look at population studies, the growth is coming from the LAAM region," said Fariborz Ghadar of the Center for Global Business Studies at Pennsylvania State University. "The U.S. is stagnant, the EU isn't growing, and Brazil is growing like crazy and costs are lower. GM and Ford are going to have to use their engineering talents overseas to help reduce overhead."