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Volkswagen opens Rwanda’s 1st car assembly plant

Thursday, June 28, 2018

AP | German carmaker Volkswagen opened the first car assembly plant in Rwanda’s capital on Wednesday in a milestone for the East African country that is trying to cut back on used car imports from Asia.

President Paul Kagame said Africa should not be a dumping ground for secondhand items, and that African consumers will be among the biggest contributors to global demand in the coming years. “Africa and Rwanda deserve better and this is one way of showing we can afford it,” he said.

Kagame said that used vehicles are a leading cause of pollution and are also expensive to maintain. “In the long run you end up paying a higher price anyway. When you can pay a high price for a secondhand, why can’t you pay higher price for something new?” He posed.

Last year there were 300,000 cars registered in Rwanda, a country of 12 million people, according to revenue authority records. Most of the cars were imported as used vehicles from Japan.

Thomas Schafer, CEO of Volkswagen South Africa, said Rwanda’s relative security and economic stability encouraged the company to launch operations there.

He said the 1st phase of the investment is expected to employ about 1,000 people. Models to be assembled in Rwanda, using parts brought in from abroad, include the Polo, Passat Teramont, Tiguan and Amarok pickup models.

The cars will be mostly for export to other African nations.

“Rwanda is a young, modern and digital country, and because of that it is perfectly suited for new, interconnected mobility services,” Schafer said.

Volkswagen said the cars assembled in Rwanda are more environmentally friendly than older models in terms of emission levels. The carmaker also has enlisted a local company to run its ride-sharing service, in which the cars will be owned by the automaker, and signed up a local software firm to develop a smartphone app to hail rides.

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