SHANGHAI, Nov 3 (Reuters) -
China's Geely Holding Group will use a factory
once owned by SAIC Motor and U.S. partner General
Motors ( GM ) in the northeastern city of Shenyang to produce
clean energy vehicles, said a person with direct knowledge of
the plan.
The Chinese automaker has held talks with several
parties to explore the plan's feasibility in recent months, said
the person. No final decision has been made over which models or
brands would be made at the plant, they added.
The person declined to be named as they were not
authorised to speak to the media.
Geely declined to comment on the proposal. GM and SAIC
did not immediately respond to requests for comment.
As one of GM's Chinese plants equally owned with SAIC,
the Shenyang Norsom factory had an annual capacity of 500,000
vehicles and was used to make Buick GL8 minivans and the
Chevrolet Tracker SUV for the China market. GM and SAIC
closed
the plant in February after sales of the U.S. automaker's
Chevrolet, Buick and Cadillac brands slumped in China - to
500,000 units in 2024 from a peak of 2 million units in 2017.
Geely's move underlines its strategy of utilising
existing car production facilities rather than building new
plants. Chairman Eric Li warned in June of "
serious overcapacity
" in the global automotive industry.
Geely also on Monday finalised a deal to use Renault's
plant in Brazil to produce Geely-branded cars for sale in the
biggest Latin American market.
Geely's sales have been growing this year and it has
been taking market share from domestic rival BYD. The group's
total vehicle sales in the nine months to the end of September
rose 29% from a year ago to 2.95 million units, as sales of its
cost competitive clean energy models including pure electric,
plug-in hybrids and methanol-powered vehicles surged 68%.
Geely's listed arm, which includes its Geely, Zeekr and
Lynk & Co brands, saw its share of the domestic market grow to
11% in the first nine months from 7.6% a year ago, while BYD's
dropped from 15.8% to 14.9%.
Chinese media outlet LatePost first reported Geely's plan to
use the Shenyang factory on Monday.