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Volvo takes pole after China truck purchase

Swedish truckmaker Volvo claims to have become the largest global manufacturer of heavy trucks after completing the purchase of 45 percent of Chinese firm Dongfeng Commercial Vehicles (DFCV).

Volvo takes pole after China truck purchase

The firm announced on Saturday that it had agreed to pay almost 5.8 billion kronor ($900 million) for the stake in the Hubei-based firm, which is a newly formed subsidiary of Dong Feng (DFG).

“The deal is a fantastic opportunity for us, and gives us a strong position in the world’s largest truck market. The Chinese market is as big as USA’s and Europe’s combined,” said Volvo’s spokeswoman Kina Wileke to the TT news agency.

The deal is conditional on the approval of competition authorities and is expected to take around 12 months to complete. But according to Wileke it establishes AB Volvo as market leader within heavy trucks, overtaking Daimler.

“Dong Feng and AB Volvo sold a combined 400,000 heavy and medium duty trucks in 2011,” she pointed out.

Volvo will make payment of the some 5.6 billion Chinese Yuan sales price at the completion of the deal. Dong Feng will retain the remaining 55 percent in DFCV.

The deal will increase AB Volvo’s net debt by around 6 billion kronor and the firm declined to specify how the purchase will be financed.

“We are not telling,” Kina Wileke said.

According to Wileke, the deal is the largest single industrial investment by a Swedish firm to date in China and she assured that there are no plans to shift jobs from Sweden to China.

“As it looks now we are not going to move any jobs from Sweden to China as a result of this deal, on the contrary it creates employment. When we create jobs overseas, it also creates jobs in Sweden,” she said.

AB Volvo’s CEO Olof Persson called the partnership with Dong Feng “the best of both worlds” in a press statement.

“Dong Feng is a partner we know well, which we have worked with over the course of several years and which has a leadership and a product assortment which we really like,” he said.

Persson identified benefits for both firms from the deal, pointing out the “excellent opportunities for economies of scale within purchasing, development and production within Volvo concern’s truck operations”.

DFCV holds a market share in China of around 16.1 percent within heavy duty trucks and 15.7 percent within medium-duty trucks. The firm has 28,000 employees.

The firm’s head office is located in Wuhan in Hubei province and its truck operations and manufacture are concentrated in Shiyan, also in Hubei.

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CHINA

China derides Copenhagen democracy meet as ‘political farce’

China on Tuesday blasted a democracy conference in Copenhagen attended by Taiwan's president and a Hong Kong activist alongside Danish government officials this week, qualifying it a "political farce".

China derides Copenhagen democracy meet as 'political farce'
Demonstrators gathered outside the Copenhagen Democracy Summit on Tuesday. Photo: Emil Helms/Ritzau Scanpix

The Copenhagen Democracy Summit was held Monday and Tuesday in the Danish capital and organised by the Alliance of Democracies, an organisation targeted by Beijing sanctions in March and founded by former NATO boss Anders Fogh Rasmussen.

In addition to Taiwan’s President Tsai Ing-wen and Hong Kong democracy activist Nathan Law, Danish Foreign Minister Jeppe Kofod also participated in the forum by video link, which Beijing said violated “the one-China principle.”

“This summit is a political farce,” the Chinese embassy in Denmark wrote in a statement published on Tuesday. “Inviting those who advocate Taiwan and Hong Kong ‘independence’ to the meeting violates the one-China principle and interferes in China’s internal affairs,” it said.

“Some hypocritical western politicians are good at meddling in other countries’ internal affairs and creating divisions and confrontation in the name of ‘democracy’ and ‘freedom’. They are bound to fail,” it added.

At the conference on Monday, Kofod said it was “deplorable” that Beijing had imposed sanctions on 10 European individuals and organisations in response to EU sanctions on Xinjiang officials over their actions against the Uyghur Muslim minority.

Like most countries, Denmark applies the one-China principle — under which Beijing bars other countries from having simultaneous diplomatic relations with Taipei — though it does maintain relations with Taiwan.

Cut off politically from the rest of China since the end of the Chinese Civil War in 1949, the territory is self-governing but is not recognised by
the United Nations.

Beijing considers Taiwan a rebel province that will one day return under its control, by force if necessary.

China’s sabre-rattling has increased considerably over the past year, with fighter jets and nuclear-capable bombers breaching Taiwan’s air defence zone on a near-daily basis.

“Our government is fully aware of the threats to regional security, and is actively enhancing our national defence capabilities to protect our
democracy,” Tsai told the conference in a video address on Monday. US President Joe Biden is expected to present his China strategy soon, as
calls mount for him to publicly commit to defending Taiwan militarily in the event of a Chinese attack.

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