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Chinese electric vehicle maker ready to open Bahia factory
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BYD eyes Brazilian assembly of some 50,000 cars in 2025
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Executive says labor lawsuit will not derail factory
timeline
By Luciana Magalhaes
SAO PAULO, July 7 (Reuters) - China's BYD is
poised to start assembling electric vehicles at a new factory in
Brazil as early as this month, a top executive said, reducing
imports as tariffs start to rise in its largest foreign market.
Alexandre Baldy, senior vice president for BYD in Brazil,
said the goal is to assemble 50,000 cars this year at the plant
in Bahia state from imported kits, adding that he is negotiating
a lower tax rate on those vehicles.
"We should inaugurate in the coming days," Baldy said in an
interview late on Friday, without specifying a date, as final
regulatory approvals are still pending. "We've already completed
this year's imports, taking advantage of the period before the
import tax increase that took effect on July 1."
BYD had sent a surge of finished cars into Brazil this year to
take advantage of temporarily lower tariffs, shipping some
22,000 from China in the first five months, according to Reuters
calculations.
That stirred complaints in Brazil's auto industry that BYD was
privileging Chinese manufacturing over production from Bahia,
where a labor probe and heavy rains have disrupted plans. A
state labor secretary said in May that the plant would only be
"fully functional" at the end of 2026.
However, Baldy said it would begin full production in July
2026, after assembling vehicles from "complete knock down" (CKD)
kits for the next 12 months.
Once fully operational, he said, the complex in Camacari is
likely to generate up to 20,000 direct and indirect jobs.
Expectations for the operation, on the site of a former Ford
plant taken over in 2023, suffered in December when labor
inspectors leveled accusations of labor abuses involving Chinese
contractors hired to build the complex.
Brazilian prosecutors filed a lawsuit in May holding BYD
responsible for human trafficking and submitting workers to
"slavery-like conditions," after talks on a settlement fell
through.
"BYD has always sought to respect Brazilian law and human
dignity in all operations," Baldy said, adding that the company
wanted to reach a resolution. He did not say why efforts to
negotiate a settlement had fallen through.