Automotive industry
The automotive industry is a term that covers a wide range of companies and organizations involved in the design, development, manufacture, marketing, and selling of motor vehicles, towed vehicles, motorcycles and mopeds. It is one of the world's most important economic sectors by revenue.
The term automotive industry usually does not include industries dedicated to the maintenance of automobiles following delivery to the end-user, such as repair shops and motor fuel filling stations.
The term automotive was created from Greek autos (self), and Latin motivus (of motion) to represent any form of self-powered vehicle. This term was proposed by SAE member Elmer Sperry.[1]
History
The automotive industry began in the 1890s with hundreds of manufacturers that pioneered the horseless carriage. For many decades, the United States led the world in total automobile production. In 1929 before the Great Depression, the world had 32,028,500 automobiles in use, and the U.S. automobile industry produced over 90% of them. At that time the U.S. had one car per 4.87 persons.[2] After World War II, the U.S. produced about 75 percent of world's auto production. In 1980, the U.S. was overtaken by Japan and became world's leader again in 1994. In 2006, Japan narrowly passed the U.S. in production and held this rank until 2009, when China took the top spot with 13.8 million units. With 19.3 million units manufactured in 2012, China almost doubled the U.S. production, with 10.3 million units, while Japan was in third place with 9.9 million units.[3]
Safety
Safety is a state that implies to be protected from any risk, danger, damage or cause of injury. In the automotive industry, safety means that users, operators or manufacturers do not face any risk or danger coming from the motor vehicle or its spare parts. Safety for the automotives themselves implies that there is no risk of damage.
Safety in the automotive industry is particularly important and therefore highly regulated. Automobiles and other motor vehicles have to comply with a certain number of norms and regulations, whether local or international, in order to be accepted on the market. The standard ISO 26262 [4] (_See also main article:_ ISO 26262) for instance is considered as one of the best practice framework for achieving automotive functional safety.[5] That is, to ensure that motored vehicles meet all requirements for safe manufacturing and operation for end-users.
In case of safety issues, danger, product defect or faulty procedure during the manufacturing of the motor vehicle, the maker can request to return either a batch or the entire production run. This procedure is called product recall. Product recalls happen in every industry and can be production-related or stem from the raw material.
Product and operation tests and inspections at different stages of the value chain are made to avoid these product recalls by ensuring end-user security and safety and compliance with the automotive industry requirements. However, the automotive industry is still particularly concerned about product recalls,[6] which cause considerable financial consequences.
Economy
Around the world, there were about 806 million cars and light trucks on the road in 2007, consuming over 260 billion US gallons (980,000,000 m3) of gasoline and diesel fuel yearly.[7] The automobile is a primary mode of transportation for many developed economies. The Detroit branch of Boston Consulting Group predicts that, by 2014, one-third of world demand will be in the four BRIC markets (Brazil, Russia, India and China). Other potentially powerful automotive markets are Iran and Indonesia.[8] Emerging auto markets already buy more cars than established markets. According to a J.D. Power study, emerging markets accounted for 51 percent of the global light-vehicle sales in 2010. The study expects this trend to accelerate.[9][10]
World motor vehicle production
For many decades, the United States led the world in total automobile production. In 1929 before the Great Depression, the world had 32,028,500 automobiles in use, and the US automobile industry produced over 90% of them. At that time the U.S. had one car per 4.87 persons.[11] After WWII the U.S. issued 3/4 of world's auto production. In 1980 the U.S. was overtaken by Japan and became world's leader again in 1994. In 2006, Japan narrowly passed the U.S. in production and held this rank until 2009, when China took the top spot with 13.8 million units. By producing 18.4 million units in 2011, China produced more than twice the number of automobiles made by the U.S. in second place with 8.7 million units, while Japan was in third place with 8.4 million units.[3]
By year
Template:Global Production of Motorvehicles
By country
Template:World motor vehicle production by country in 2012
By manufacturer
Rank of manufacturers by production, 2012[12]
Rank | Group | Total | Cars | LCV | HCV | Heavy Bus |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Toyota | 10,104,424 | 8,381,968 | 1,448,107 | 268,377 | 5,972 |
2 | GM | 9,285,425 | 6,608,567 | 2,658,612 | 7,558 | 10,688 |
3 | Volkswagen | 9,254,742 | 8,576,964 | 486,544 | 169,064 | 22,170 |
4 | Hyundai | 7,126,413 | 6,761,074 | 279,579 | 70,290 | 15,470 |
5 | Ford | 5,595,483 | 3,123,340 | 2,394,221 | 77,922 | |
6 | Nissan | 4,889,379 | 3,830,954 | 1,022,974 | 35,451 | |
7 | Honda | 4,110,857 | 4,078,376 | 32,481 | ||
8 | PSA | 2,911,764 | 2,554,059 | 357,705 | ||
9 | Suzuki | 2,893,602 | 2,483,721 | 409,881 | ||
10 | Renault | 2,676,226 | 2,302,769 | 373,457 | ||
11 | Chrysler | 2,371,427 | 656,892 | 1,702,235 | 12,300 | |
12 | Daimler AG | 2,195,152 | 1,455,650 | 257,496 | 450,622 | 31,384 |
13 | FIAT | 2,127,295 | 1,501,979 | 498,984 | 85,513 | 40,819 |
14 | BMW | 2,065,477 | 2,065,216 | 261 | ||
15 | SAIC | 1,783,548 | 1,523,398 | 190,848 | 67,805 | 1,497 |
16 | Tata | 1,241,239 | 744,067 | 314,399 | 165,171 | 17,602 |
17 | Mazda | 1,189,283 | 1,097,661 | 91,622 | ||
18 | Dongfeng Motor | 1,137,950 | 539,845 | 245,641 | 337,545 | 14,919 |
19 | Mitsubishi | 1,109,731 | 980,001 | 127,435 | 2,295 | |
20 | Changan | 1,063,721 | 835,334 | 166,727 | 59,978 | 1,682 |
21 | Geely | 922,906 | 922,906 | |||
22 | Fuji | 753,320 | 734,959 | 18,361 | ||
23 | BAIC | 720,828 | 83,033 | 285,081 | 348,659 | 4,055 |
24 | FAW | 706,012 | 480,443 | 52,983 | 168,793 | 3,793 |
25 | Great Wall | 624,426 | 487,704 | 136,722 | ||
26 | Mahindra | 606,418 | 429,101 | 173,083 | 3,461 | 773 |
27 | Isuzu | 600,470 | 32,309 | 565,617 | 2,544 | |
28 | Chery | 563,951 | 550,565 | 13,386 | ||
29 | Avtovaz | 553,232 | 553,232 | |||
30 | Brilliance | 489,770 | 231,527 | 231,862 | 26,381 | |
31 | JAC | 476,356 | 200,278 | 114,864 | 145,811 | 15,403 |
32 | BYD | 455,444 | 455,444 | |||
33 | Chonhqing Lifan | 272,657 | 183,750 | 24,035 | 64,872 | |
34 | Volvo | 234,680 | 224,000 | 10,680 | ||
35 | Proton | 162,455 | 134,934 | 27,521 | ||
36 | China National Heavy Duty Truck | 127,792 | 1,224 | 125,792 | 776 | |
37 | Paccar | 125,336 | 125,336 | |||
38 | GAZ | 125,319 | 88,899 | 21,561 | 14,859 | |
39 | Ashok Leyland | 117,738 | 30,776 | 61,519 | 25,443 | |
40 | Hunan Jiangnan Automobile Manufacturing Co. | 117,051 | 117,051 | |||
41 | GAC Group | 114,157 | 87,408 | 25,611 | 1,138 | |
42 | Shannxi | 86,283 | 8,044 | 166 | 77,808 | 265 |
43 | Porsche | 86,083 | 86,083 | |||
44 | Soueast (Fujian) | 85,515 | 81,512 | 4,003 | ||
45 | Navistar | 83,371 | 72,005 | 11,366 | ||
46 | Xiamen King Long | 78,226 | 36,451 | 41,775 | ||
47 | UAZ | 70,434 | 32,469 | 37,965 | ||
48 | Tangjun Ou Ling | 69,167 | 16,459 | 52,708 | ||
49 | Hebei Zhongxing | 63,221 | 4,955 | 58,266 | ||
50 | Sichuan Nanjun | 60,743 | 18,296 | 41,602 | 845 |
OICA[13] defines these entries as follows:
- Passenger cars are motor vehicles with at least four wheels, used for the transport of passengers, and comprising no more than eight seats in addition to the driver's seat.
- Light commercial vehicles (LCV) are motor vehicles with at least four wheels, used for the carriage of goods. Mass given in tons (metric tons) is used as a limit between light commercial vehicles and heavy trucks. This limit depends on national and professionnal definitions and varies between 3.5 and 7 tons. Minibuses, derived from light commercial vehicles, are used for the transport of passengers, comprising more than eight seats in addition to the driver's seat and having a maximum mass between 3.5 and 7 tons.
- Heavy trucks (HCV) are vehicles intended for the carriage of goods. Maximum authorised mass is over the limit (ranging from 3.5 to 7 tons) of light commercial vehicles. They include tractor vehicles designed for towing semi-trailers.
- Buses and coaches are used for the transport of passengers, comprising more than eight seats in addition to the driver's seat, and having a maximum mass over the limit (ranging from 3.5 to 7 tones) of light commercial vehicles.
Company relationships
It is common for automobile manufacturers to hold stakes in other automobile manufacturers. These ownerships can be explored under the detail for the individual companies.
Notable current relationships include:[citation needed]
- AB Volvo and Eicher Motors has a 50-50% joint venture called VE Commercial Vehicles.
- Anadolu Group and Isuzu have a 50-50% joint venture called Anadolu Isuzu.
- Beijing Automotive Group has a joint venture with Daimler called Beijing Benz, both companies hold a 50-50% stake. both companies also have a joint venture called Beijing Foton Daimler Automobile. BAG also has a joint venture with Hyundai called Beijing Hyundai, both companies hold a 50-50% stake.
- BMW and Brilliance have a joint venture called BMW Brilliance. BMW owns a 50% stake, Brilliance owns a 40.5% stake, and the Shenyang municipal government owns a 9.5% stake.
- Chang'an Automobile Group has three joint ventures, one with PSA Peugeot Citroen(CAPSA), both hold a 50-50% stake, one with Suzuki(Changan Suzuki), both hold a 50-50% stake, and one with Ford and Mazda(Changan Ford Mazda), CAG holds a 50% stake, Ford holds a 35% stake, and Mazda holds a 15% stake. Chang'an and Ford have a joint venture called Chang'an Ford Nanjing. Jiangling and Chang'an have a joint venture called Jiangxi Jiangling.
- Chery has a joint venture with Tata Motors called Chery Jaguar Land Rover, both companies hold a 50-50% stake. Chery and Israel Corporation has a joint venture called Qoros, both companies hold a 50-50% stake.
- Daimler AG holds a 20% stake in Eicher Motors, a 10.0% stake in KAMAZ, an 89.29% stake in Mitsubishi Fuso Truck and Bus Corporation, a 4.7% stake in Tesla Motors, a 6.75% stake in Tata Motors and a 3.1% in the Renault-Nissan Alliance, a 12% stake in Beijing Automotive Group, and an 85% stake in Master Motors. Daimler and BYD Auto have a joint venture called Denza, both companies hold a 50-50% stake.
- Dongfeng Motor Corporation and Nissan have a 50-50% joint venture called Venucia, and another 50-50% joint venture called Dongfeng Motor Company. Dongfeng and PSA Group have a 50-50% joint venture called Dongfeng Peugeot-Citroen, a 50-50% joint venture with Honda called Dongfeng Honda, a joint venture with AB Volvo called Dongfeng Nissan-Diesel.
- Fiat holds a 90% stake in Ferrari, 100% of Chrysler, and a 67% stake in Fiat Automobili Srbija.
- Fiat Automobili Srbija owns a 54% stake in Zastava Trucks.
- Fiat Industrial owns a 46% stake in Zastava Trucks.
- Ford Motor Company holds a 3% stake in Mazda, a 12.1% share in Aston Martin, a 49% share in Jiangling Motors. Ford and Navistar International have a 50-50 joint venture called Blue Dimond Truck. Ford and Sollers JSC have a 50-50 joint venture called Ford Sollers. Both Ford and Koç Holding own a 41% stake in Ford Otosan. Ford and Lio Ho Group hanve a joint venture called Ford Lio Ho, Ford owns 70% and Lio Ho Group owns 30%.
- FAW Group and GM has a 50-50 joint venture called FAW-GM, a 50-50 joint venture with Volkswagen Group called FAW-Volkswagen, and a 50-50 joint venture with Toyota called Sichuan FAW Toyota Motor and both companies also have another joint venture called Ranz. FAW Group owns 49% of Haima Automobile
- Fujian Motors Group holds a 15% stake in King Long. FMG, China Motor, and Daimler has a joint venture called Fujian Benz. FMG, China Motor, and Mitsubishi Motors has a joint venture called Soueast, FMG holds a 50% stake, and both China Motor and Mitsubishi Motors holds an equal 25% stake.
- Geely Automobile holds a 23% stake in Manganese Bronze Holdings.
- General Motors holds a 20% stake in Industries Mécaniques Maghrébines. General Motors and Shanghai Automotive Industry Corporation (SAIC), and has two joint ventures in Shanghai General Motors and SAIC-GM-Wuling Automobile. Both also hold an equal 50% stake in General Motors India Private Limited. And General Motors holds a 94% stake in GM Korea and SAIC Group holds a 6% stake. General Motors and UzAvtosanoat have a joint venture called GM Uzbekistan, UzAvtosanoat owns 75% and General Motors owns 25%. General Motors and UzAvtosanoat also have a joint venture called UzDaewooAvto both each hold a 50-50 stake. GM, AvtoVAZ, and EBRD have a joint venture called GM-AvtoVAZ, Both GM and AvtoVAZ owns 41.61% and EBRD owns 16.76%.
- Hyundai Motor Group and Kibar Holding has a joint venture called Hyundai Assan Otomotiv, Hyundai Motor Group owns 70% and Kibar Holding owns 30%.
- Isuzu and General Motors has a 50-50% joint venture called Isuzu Truck South Africa. Isuzu owns 10% of Industries Mécaniques Maghrébines. Isuzu, Sollers JSC, and Imperial Sojitz have a joint venture called Sollers-Isuzu, Sollers JSC owns66%, Isuzu owns 29%, and Imperial Sojitz owns 5%.
- Mahindra & Mahindra and Navistar International has a joint venture called Mahindra Trucks and Buses Limited. Mahindra & Mahindra owns 51% and Navistar International owns 49%.
- MAN SE holds a 17.01% voting stake in Scania. MAN and UzAvtosanoat have a joint venture called MAN Auto-Uzbekistan, UzAvtosanoat owns 51% and MAN owns 49%.
- Marcopolo owns 19% of New Flyer Industries.
- Navistar International and JAC has a joint venture called Anhui Jianghuai Navistar.
- Nissan owns 43% of Nissan Shatai.
- Porsche Automobil Holding SE has a 50.74% voting stake in Volkswagen Group. The Porsche automotive business is fully owned by the Volkswagen Group.
- PSA Peugeot Citroen and Toyota have a 50-50% joint venture called Toyota Peugeot Citroen Automobile Czech, and another joint venture with Chang'an called Chang'an PSA automobile.
- Renault and Nissan Motors have an alliance( Renault-Nissan Alliance ) involving two global companies linked by cross-shareholding, with Renault holding 44.3% of Nissan shares, and Nissan holding 15% of (non-voting) Renault shares. The alliance holds a 3.1% share in Daimler AG.
- Renault holds a 25% stake in AvtoVAZ and an 80.1% stake in Renault Samsung.
- SAIPA holds a 51% stake in Pars Khodro.
- Sollers JSC is involved in Joint ventures with Ford(Ford Sollers) and Mazda to produce cars.
- Toyota holds a 51% stake in Daihatsu, 16.5% in Fuji Heavy Industries, parent company of Subaru, and a 10% stake in Tesla, .
- Volkswagen Group holds a 37.73% stake in Scania (68.6% voting rights), a 53.7% stake in MAN SE (55.9% voting rights), and a 99.55% stake in the Audi Group. Volkswagen is integrating Scania, MAN and its own truck division into one division.Volkswagen Group has a 19.9% stake in Suzuki, and Suzuki has a 5% stake in Volkswagen.
- Paccar inc. has a 19% stake in Tatra.
- Tata Motors also formed a joint venture with Fiat and gained access to Fiat’s diesel engine technology.Tata Motors sells Fiat cars in India through a 50/50 joint venture Fiat Automobiles India Limited, and is looking to extend its relationship with Fiat and Iveco to other segments. Tata and Marcopolo have a Tata Marcopolo, Tata owns 51% and Marcopolo owns 49%.
- ZAP owns 51% of Zhejiang Jonway.
Top vehicle manufacturing groups by volume
The table below shows the world's largest motor vehicle manufacturing groups, along with the marques produced by each one. The table is ranked by 2011 end-of-year production figures from the International Organization of Motor Vehicle Manufacturers (OICA)[14] for the parent group, and then alphabetically by marque. Joint ventures are not reflected in this table. Production figures of joint ventures are typically included in OICA rankings, which can become a source of controversy.[15][16]
Note: This section does not include the selling of other products in a region; example: CAT sells commercial vehicles in the US, Canada, Mexico, Australia, and New Zealand, but sells its other products worldwide. If the table (markets) says that a brand is available in example North America, it doesn't include territories controlled by countries on other continents. Example: GMC isn't available in any European territories within North America. Depending on the situation between one country and another, that automotive brand may or may not be available in that certain country. Example: Because the United States and Iran do not have embassies with each other, automakers from both countries are not allowed to do business within the country, so Ford is available worldwide except Cuba, Iran, North Korea, and Bhutan. Also if an automaker owns minority (less than 50%) or majority ownership of an automotive company from another country that established relationships with a country that its parent automaker with its headquarters in a country with no established relationship with that country, depending on the situation, the parent company may be forced to have the automotive company that it has practical ownership of to leave that country, if issued by the government of that country. While the parent company that has majority to fully owned ownership of a company from another country, that parent company is not allowed to have that company operate in that certain country. Example; General Motors has partial ownership in PSA Peugeot Citroen, and due to the situation with Iran, General Motors forced PSA Group to leave Iran. And General Motors has complete ownership of Opel and because of that, General Motors is not allowed to have the foreign company operate in countries the U.S. doesn't have an embassy with.
Marque | Country of origin | Ownership | Markets | |
---|---|---|---|---|
1. Toyota Motor Corporation ( Japan) | ||||
Daihatsu | Subsidiary | Europe, Asia, Africa, and South America | ||
Hino | Subsidiary | South East Asia, Japan, North America and South America | ||
Lexus | Division | South East Asia, Japan, Middle East, United States, Canada, Europe, Brazil, Panama, Chile, Australia, New Zealand, South Africa, India | ||
Ranz | Joint-venture | China | ||
Scion | Division | United States, Canada | ||
Toyota | Division | Global, except Iran | ||
2. General Motors Company ( United States) | ||||
Baojun | Joint venture | China | ||
Buick | Division | United States, Canada, Mexico, China, Israel | ||
Cadillac | Division | North America, Europe, Middle East, China, Japan, South Korea | ||
Chevrolet | Division | Global, except Australia, New Zealand | ||
GMC | Division | North America, Middle East(except Israel) | ||
Holden | Subsidiary | Australia, New Zealand | ||
HSV | Subsidiary | Australia, New Zealand | ||
Jie Fang | Joint venture | China | ||
Opel | Subsidiary | Europe (except UK), North Africa, South Africa, Middle East, China, Singapore, Chile | ||
Vauxhall | Subsidiary | United Kingdom | ||
UzDaewoo | Joint venture | Central Asia, Russia | ||
Wuling | Joint venture | China | ||
2. Volkswagen Group AG ( Germany) | ||||
Audi | Subsidiary | Global, except Iran | ||
Bentley | Subsidiary | Global | ||
Bugatti | Subsidiary | Global | ||
Lamborghini | Subsidiary | Global | ||
Ducati | Subsidiary | Global | ||
MAN | Subsidiary | Europe, Asia, Africa, South America, India | ||
Porsche | Subsidiary | Global, except Iran | ||
Scania | Subsidiary | Global | ||
SEAT | Subsidiary | Europe, South America, Africa, Middle East, China, Mexico | ||
Škoda | Subsidiary | Europe, Asia, Central America (including Dominican Republic), South America, Northern and western Africa, Australia, New Zealand | ||
Volkswagen | Subsidiary | Global | ||
Volkswagen Commercial Vehicles | Subsidiary | Europe, Central America, South America, Australia, China | ||
4. Hyundai Motor Group ( South Korea) | ||||
Hyundai | Division | Global, except Mexico | ||
Kia | Subsidiary | Global | ||
5. Ford Motor Company ( United States) | ||||
Ford | Division | Global | ||
FPV | Subsidiary | Australia, New Zealand | ||
Lincoln | Division | United States, Canada, Mexico, Middle East, Japan, South Korea, China | ||
Troller | Subsidiary | South America, Africa | ||
6. Nissan ( Japan) | ||||
Datsun | Division | Indonesia, India, Russia, South Africa | ||
Infiniti | Subsidiary | Global, except Japan, Korea, South America and Africa | ||
Nissan | Division | Global | ||
Venucia | Joint venture | China | ||
7. Fiat Chrysler Automobiles ( Netherlands) | ||||
Abarth | Subsidiary | Global, except Iran | ||
Alfa Romeo | Subsidiary | Global, except Iran, China, Taiwan and the Philippines | ||
Chrysler | Subsidiary | Global, except Europe (excluding UK and Ireland), Africa (excluding South Africa and Egypt), South Asia, South East Asia (excluding the Philippines) | ||
Dodge | Subsidiary | Global, except Europe, Africa(excluding South Africa and Egypt), South Asia, South East Asia (excluding the Philippines) | ||
Ferrari | Subsidiary | Global, except Africa(excluding South Africa), Iran, South East Asia | ||
Fiat | Subsidiary | Global, except Africa(excluding South Africa), Iran, South East Asia | ||
Fiat Professional | Subsidiary | Global, except Africa(excluding South Africa), Iran, South East Asia, United States, Canada | ||
Jeep | Subsidiary | Global, except Africa(excluding South Africa and Egypt), South Asia, South East Asia (excluding the Philippines) | ||
Lancia | Subsidiary | Europe (except UK and Ireland, Cyprus, Denmark, Norway, Iceland & East Europe) | ||
Maserati | Subsidiary | Global | ||
Ram | Subsidiary | United States, Canada, Mexico, Brazil, Middle East | ||
SRT | Subsidiary | Global, except Africa(excluding South Africa and Egypt), South Asia, South East Asia | ||
Zastava Trucks | Subsidiary | Europe | ||
8. PSA Peugeot Citroën S.A. ( France) | ||||
Citroën | Subsidiary | Europe, Central and South America, Northern and Western Africa, South Africa, Madagascar, Australia, New Zealand, Asia (except India, Pakistan and Bangladesh) | ||
Peugeot | Subsidiary | Global, except USA, Canada, India, Pakistan and Bangladesh | ||
9. Honda Motor Company ( Japan) | ||||
Acura | Division | United States, Canada, Mexico, China | ||
Everus | Joint venture | China | ||
Honda | Division | Global | ||
10. Renault ( France) | ||||
Dacia | Subsidiary | Europe, Middle East, Northern Africa | ||
Renault | Division | Global, except United States, Canada, Korea, Africa (excluding Northern Africa, Ghana, Nigeria, Kenya and South Africa) | ||
Renault Samsung | Subsidiary | South Korea, Chile | ||
11. Suzuki Motor Corporation ( Japan) | ||||
Suzuki | Division | Global, except USA, Canada and Korea | ||
Maruti Suzuki | Subsidiary | India, Middle East, South America | ||
12. BMW AG ( Germany) | ||||
BMW | Division | Global | ||
MINI | Division | Global | ||
Rolls-Royce | Subsidiary | Global | ||
13. Daimler AG ( Germany) | ||||
BharatBenz | Division | India | ||
Denza | Joint venture | China | ||
Freightliner | Division | North America, South Africa, Australia, New Zealand | ||
Master | Subsidiary | Pakistan | ||
Mercedes-Benz | Division | Global | ||
Mitsubishi Fuso | Subsidiary | Global | ||
Setra | Division | Europe, Asia, USA | ||
Smart | Division | Global | ||
Thomas Built | Subsidiary | North America | ||
Western Star | Subsidiary | North America, Australia, New Zealand | ||
14. Mazda Motor Corporation ( Japan) | ||||
Mazda | Division | Global, except Korea | ||
15. Mitsubishi Motors Corporation ( Japan) | ||||
Mitsubishi | Division | Global, except Korea | ||
Ralliart | Subsidiary | Global, Except Korea | ||
16. Dongfeng Motor Corporation ( China) | ||||
Fengshen | Division | China | ||
Venucia | Joint venture | China | ||
17. Tata Motors, Ltd ( India) | ||||
Hispano | Subsidiary | Europe | ||
Jaguar | Subsidiary | Global | ||
Land Rover | Subsidiary | Global | ||
Tata | Division | India, Ghana, Italy, Nepal, South Africa, Spain, Sri Lanka, Turkey, Nigeria, Australia | ||
Tata Daewoo | Subsidiary | South Korea, Pakistan | ||
18. Geely Automobile ( China) | ||||
Englon | Division | China | ||
Emgrand | Division | China, United Kingdom, Turkey | ||
Gleagle | Division | China | ||
Geely | Division | China, Taiwan, Russia, North Africa, Middle East, South America, South Africa, Australia, Turkey | ||
Maple | Division | China | ||
Volvo (Cars) | Subsidiary | Global | ||
19. Beijing Automotive Industry Holding Corporation, Ltd ( China) | ||||
BAW | Division | China | ||
Foton | Subsidiary | China, Taiwan, Japan, Australia, South America, India | ||
20. Chana Automobile Company, Ltd ( China) | ||||
Chana | Division | China, Taiwan, South Africa, Europe | ||
Hafei | Subsidiary | China | ||
Changhe | Division | China, Venezuela | ||
Tiger Truck | Subsidiary | United States, Canada | ||
21. SAIPA ( Iran) | ||||
Pars Khodro | Subsidiary | Iran | ||
SAIPA | Division | Iran, Syria | ||
SAIPA Diesel | Subsidiary | Iran | ||
Zamyad | Subsidiary | Iran | ||
22. Chery Automobile Company, Ltd ( China) | ||||
Chery | Division | China, South East Asia, Russia, South Africa, South America, Australia | ||
Qoros | Joint-Venture | China, Europe, Israel | ||
Riich | Division | China | ||
Rely | Division | China | ||
23. OAO AvtoVAZ ( Russia) | ||||
Lada | Division | Europe (except United Kingdom, Portugal and Malta), Central Asia | ||
VIS | Division | Russia | ||
24. First Automotive Group Corporation ( China) | ||||
Besturn | Division | China | ||
Freewind | Subsidiary | China | ||
Haima | Subsidiary | China | ||
Hongqi | Division | China | ||
Jiaxing | Subsidiary | China | ||
Jie Fang | Joint venture | China | ||
Vita | Subsidiary | China | ||
Xiali | Subsidiary | China | ||
25. Fuji Heavy Industries, Ltd ( Japan) | ||||
Subaru | Division | Global, except Mexico and Korea | ||
26. Great Wall Motor Company, Ltd ( China) | ||||
Great Wall | Division | China, Taiwan, South Africa, Russia, North Africa, Australia, Europe, Middle East | ||
27. Isuzu Motors, Ltd ( Japan) | ||||
Isuzu | Division | Global, except Brazil and Korea | ||
28. Anhui Jianghuai Automobile Company, Ltd ( China) | ||||
JAC | Division | China, Africa, Brazil | ||
29. Brilliance China Automotive Holding, Ltd ( China) | ||||
Brilliance | Division | China, North Africa | ||
Jinbei | Subsidiary | China | ||
30. SAIC Motor ( China) | ||||
Baojun | Joint venture | China | ||
Maxus | Division | China, Australia, South Africa, United Kingdom, Chile, Malaysia | ||
MG Motor | Subsidiary | China, United Kingdom, South America, Australia | ||
Roewe | Division | China, Belarus | ||
Soyat | Division | China | ||
Yuejin | Division | China | ||
Wuling | Joint venture | China | ||
31. BYD Auto ( China) | ||||
BYD | Division | China, Taiwan, Russia, United States, Canada | ||
Denza | Joint venture | China | ||
32. Mahindra & Mahindra, Ltd ( India) | ||||
Mahindra | Division | India, South East Asia, Europe, North Africa, North America, Australia | ||
REVA | Division | India | ||
SsangYong | Subsidiary | Global, except North America and Japan | ||
33. AB Volvo ( Sweden) | ||||
Mack | Subsidiary | United States, Canada, Mexico, Venezuela, Peru, Australia | ||
NovaBus | Subsidiary | North America | ||
Prevost | Subsidiary | North America | ||
Renault Trucks | Subsidiary | Global, except Japan, United States and Canada | ||
UD Trucks | Subsidiary | Global | ||
Volvo Trucks | Subsidiary | Global | ||
35. Iran Khodro Company ( Iran) | ||||
Iran Khodoro | Division | Middle East,Northern Africa, Russia, Belarus, Central Asia, China, Venezuela | ||
IKCO Diesel | Division | Middle East, Northern and Western Africa | ||
36. Chongqing Lifan Automobile Company, Ltd ( China) | ||||
Lifan | Division | China, Taiwan, Russia, Middle East, South America | ||
37. Proton Holdings, Bhd ( Malaysia) | ||||
Lotus | Subsidiary | Global | ||
Proton | Division | Southeast Asia, China, Australia, United Kingdom, Middle East | ||
38. Jiangling Motors ( China) | ||||
Jiangling | Division | China, Europe | ||
39. Fujian Motors Group ( China) | ||||
Soueast | Joint-Venture | China | ||
King Long | Joint-Venture | China, South East Asia, India, North America, Europe, Middle East, Australia, New Zealand | ||
Xiamen Golden Dragon | Joint-Venture | China, South East Asia, Middle East, Africa, South America | ||
Higer Bus | Joint-Venture | China,South Asia, Middle East, Africa, Russia, Eastern Europe, United States, Canada, Central America, South America | ||
40. Kuozui Motors, Ltd ( Taiwan) | ||||
Kuozui | Subsidiary | Taiwan | ||
42. China National Heavy Duty Truck Group ( China) | ||||
Sinotruck | Division | China | ||
43. Hunan Jiangnan Automobile ( China) | ||||
Jiangnan | Division | China | ||
44. Paccar Inc. ( United States) | ||||
DAF Trucks | Subsidiary | Global, except North America and Japan | ||
Kenworth | Division | North America, Australia | ||
Leyland Trucks | Subsidiary | Global, except North America and Japan | ||
Peterbilt | Division | North America | ||
45. GAZ ( Russia) | ||||
GAZ | Division | Russia, Europe, Central Asia | ||
LiAZ | Subsidiary | Russia | ||
Ural Trucks | Division | Russia | ||
46. Shaanxi Automobile Group ( China) | ||||
Shaanxi | Division | China | ||
47. Qingling Motors Company Ltd. ( China) | ||||
Qingling | Division | China | ||
48. Ashok Leyland ( India) | ||||
Ashok Leyland | Division | South Asia, Middle East, East Africa | ||
49. Navistar International Corporation ( United States) | ||||
eStar | Division | United States, Canada | ||
IC | Subsidiary | United States, Canada | ||
International | Division | North America, South America, Russia, Middle East, Egypt, South Africa | ||
??. Fiat Industrial S.p.A ( Italy) | ||||
Defence Vehicles | Subsidiary | Europe | ||
Heuliez Bus | Subsidiary | Europe | ||
Iveco | Subsidiary | Global | ||
Iveco Astra | Subsidiary | Europe | ||
Iveco Bus | Subsidiary | Global, except North America | ||
Magirus | Subsidiary | Global, except North America | ||
??. Oshkosh Corporation ( United States) | ||||
Oshkosh | Division | USA, Canada, China | ||
??. Yulon Motor ( Taiwan) | ||||
Luxgen | Division | Taiwan, China, Oman | ||
Tobe | Division | Taiwan | ||
??. Shandong Kaima ( China) | ||||
Kaima | Division | China | ||
Jubao | Division | China | ||
Aofeng | Division | China | ||
??. Guangzhou Automobile Industry Group Co Ltd ( China) | ||||
Changfeng | Subsidiary | China, Russia, Middle East, Africa | ||
Everus | Joint venture | China | ||
Gonow | Subsidiary | China | ||
Trumpchi | Division | China | ||
??. Micro (cars) ( Sri Lanka) | ||||
Micro (cars) | Division | Sri Lanka | ||
??. Rongcheng Hawtai Automobile ( China) | ||||
Hawtai | Division | China | ||
??. Caterpillar Inc. ( United States) | ||||
CAT | Division | United States, Canada, Mexico, Australia, New Zealand |
See also
- Alliance of Automobile Manufacturers
- Automotive industry by country
- Automotive industry crisis of 2008–2010
- Automotive market
- Big Three automobile manufacturers
- Effects of the 2008-2009 automotive industry crisis on the United States
- List of countries by motor vehicle production
- Motocycle
- Largest automotive companies by revenue
References
- ^ Scientific and Technical Societies of the United States (Eighth ed.). Washington DC: National Academy of Sciences. 1968. p. 164.
- ^ "U.S. Makes Ninety Percent of World's Automobiles". Popular Science. 115 (5): 84. November 1929. Retrieved 6 August 2013.
- ^ a b "2012 Production Statistics". OICA. Retrieved 6 August 2013. Cite error: The named reference "Production Statistics" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).
- ^ 26262-1:2011 ISO, Retrieved 04/25/2013
- ^ [1] SGS, Functional Safety
- ^ [2] SGS, Product Recalls in the Automotive Industry
- ^ "Automobile Industry Introduction". Plunkett Research. 2008. Archived from the original on 28 August 2010. Retrieved 2010-09-09.
{{cite web}}
: Unknown parameter|deadurl=
ignored (|url-status=
suggested) (help) - ^ Paul A. Eisenstein Building BRIC's: 4 Markets Could Soon Dominate the Auto World at TheDetroitBureau.com
- ^ Bertel Schmitt (15 February 2011). "Auto industry sets new world record". The Truth About Cars. Retrieved 7 August 2011.
- ^ "Global Automotive Outlook for 2011 Appears Positive as Mature Auto Markets Recover, Emerging Markets Continue to Expand". J.D. Power and Associates. 15 February 2011. Retrieved 7 August 2011.
- ^ "U.S. Makes Ninety Percent of World's Automobiles" Popular Science Monthly, November 1929, p. 84.
- ^ "World Motor Vehicle Production, Year 2012" (PDF). OICA. Retrieved 2 November 2013.
- ^ [oica.net/wp-content/uploads/stats-definition1.pdf "Definitions"] (PDF). OICA.
{{cite web}}
: Check|url=
value (help); Cite has empty unknown parameter:|1=
(help) - ^ "World Motor Vehicle Production: World Ranking of Manufacturers Year 2010" (PDF). OICA. Retrieved 2011-08-12.
- ^ "GM Slips to Number Two Worldwide, Ford to Fourth". The Truth About Cars. Archived from the original on 13 May 2010. Retrieved 2010-06-12.
{{cite web}}
: Unknown parameter|deadurl=
ignored (|url-status=
suggested) (help) - ^ "TTAC Announces World's Top Ten Automakers". The Truth About Cars. Archived from the original on 5 June 2010. Retrieved 2010-06-12.
{{cite web}}
: Unknown parameter|deadurl=
ignored (|url-status=
suggested) (help)
External links
- Alliance of Automobile Manufacturers
- All vehicle manufacturers in the world (in Dutch with English etc. translation)
- Car makes of the world, 1894—present