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China FAW Group Corp., Ltd. (First Automobile Works) is a Chinese state-owned automobile manufacturer headquartered in Changchun, Jilin.[5] Founded in 1953,[6] it is currently the second largest of the "Big Four" state-owned car manufacturers of China, together with SAIC Motor, Dongfeng Motor Corporation and Changan Automobile.[7]

China FAW Group Corporation Limited
中国第一汽车集团有限公司
TypeState-owned enterprise
IndustryAutomotive
Founded15 July 1953; 69 years ago (15 July 1953)
Headquarters,
China
Area served
East Asia (except Taiwan, South Korea, Japan), Southeast Asia, South Asia, West Asia, Eastern Europe, and Africa
Key people
Xu Liuping (Chairman)[1]
Xu Xianping (President)[2]
ProductsAutomobiles
Buses
Trucks
Automotive components
Production output
3,500,000 units (2021)[3]
RevenueRMB 292.7 billion (2010)[4]
Number of employees
132,000 (2007)
ParentSASAC
DivisionsHongqi
Besturn
Jiefang
Subsidiaries
List
  • Transportation

    other

    • FAW Tool
    • FAW Tool and Die
    • FAW Foundry
    • Harbin Light Vehicle Factory
    • Dalian Diesel Engine
    • The 9th Industrial Machinery Design and Research Institute

    International:

    • FAW Eastern Europe
    • Myanmar FAW
    • FAW Pakistan
    • FAW USA
WebsiteFAW.com
FAW Group
Simplified Chinese第一汽车集团
Traditional Chinese第一汽車集團
Literal meaningFirst Automobile Group

The company produces and sells vehicles under its own branding, such as Hongqi, Bestune (Benteng) as well as under foreign-branded joint ventures such as FAW-Toyota and FAW-Volkswagen (Volkswagen, Audi).

Its principal products are automobiles, buses, light, medium and heavy-duty trucks,[8] and auto parts.[9] FAW became China's first automobile manufacturer when it unveiled the nation's first domestically produced passenger car, the Hongqi, in 1958.[10]

The company has three publicly traded subsidiaries: FAW Car Co., Ltd. (SZSE: 000800), Tianjin FAW Xiali Automobile Co., Ltd. (SZSE: 000927), and Changchun FAWAY Automobile Components Co., Ltd. (SSE: 600742).


History


FAW Group Corporation Main Building
FAW Group Corporation Main Building
First Automobile Works' first products
First Automobile Works' first products
A FAW semi-trailer truck in China
A FAW semi-trailer truck in China

First Automobile Works broke ground on its first factory in 1953 (the first year of the first five-year plan),[11][8] and produced its first product, the Jiefang CA-10 truck (based on the Soviet ZIS-150) in 1956.[12]

Soviet Russia lent assistance during these early years providing technical support, tooling, and production machinery.[11] Before the first factory opened, 39 Chinese FAW employees traveled to the Stalin Truck Factory for instruction in truck production.[12] Operations were conducted under Soviet direction, and the USSR is even credited with choosing Changchun as the location for the first FAW facility.[13]

The Faw "winged 1" badge is derived from the Chinese 一汽 ("一" meaning "one" and "汽", from "汽车" meaning "automotive") and depicts a hawk spreading its wings, 一 (1).[14] The logo was introduced in 1964.[15]

First Automobile Works initially made only commercial trucks,[8] but started producing passenger cars in 1958.[12] These vehicles, Hongqi luxury sedans, were the first domestically produced Chinese automobiles.[12] Made primarily for the party elite, the design changed little over their thirty-year production run.[16] Following this, FAW's Audi products are the traditionally favoured choice for ranking Chinese state officials.[17]

In 1992, the name First Automobile Works was changed to FAW Group Corporation.[14]

Though FAW was the fourth Chinese automaker to take on Western partners, its early joint venture with Volkswagen in 1990 saw it become the second Chinese auto company to develop a strong cooperative relationship with a foreign counterpart. SAIC was the first, in 1984 and also with VW.[18]

Volkswagen was the first foreign partner for FAW, but others soon followed. The company acquired 50% ownership of Tianjin Automotive Xiali in September, 2002, and renamed the brand FAW Tianjin.[19] As a result, FAW ended up with Toyota as a foreign joint venture partner.[20] FAW established a joint venture with General Motors in 2009[21] and has joint ventures with a handful of other foreign companies as well.

The company produced more than 1.5 million vehicles in 2008, and in 2009 it was the largest machinery corporation and the second largest auto manufacturer in China.[22] In 2010, the 2.56 million units sold made it the third most-productive vehicle maker in China that year, and one of its offerings, the FAW Xiali, was the 7th most-purchased car in China in 2010.[23] It produced 2.6 million vehicles in 2011, the third-largest output of any China-based company.[24] While it retained its third place rank, the number of whole vehicles produced in 2012 slowed to 2.3 million.[25] Passenger cars made up a relatively scant 64% of total production that year.[25]


Brands and products


FAW sells products under at least ten different brands including its own. The following is an incomplete list.


Hongqi


Key models include:


Jiefang


Established as a subsidiary on 18 January 2003, it is a producer of medium and heavy trucks. With two subsidiaries of its own, Qingdao Truck Division and FAW Trading Company,[26] it is one make of Jiefang branded trucks.[26] As of 2003, FAW Jiefang Truck utilizes production lines dating from 1956.[26]


Bestune (formerly Besturn)


Established on August 18, 2006,[27] It may also be known as Ben Teng.[28]

Key models include:


Haima


Founded in January 1992 as Hainan Mazda Motor, a joint venture between the Hainan provincial government and Mazda to produce Mazda models for sale in China. In 2006, Mazda's share of Hainan Mazda was acquired by FAW Group, and the company became a subsidiary of FAW.

Key models include:


Other FAW Brands



Joint ventures



FAW-Toyota


Created in 2003,[34] FAW operates this joint venture with Japanese automaker Toyota through Tianjin FAW. Key subsidiaries include:

Guangzhou Toyota Motor Co

Operates a passenger car production base in the Nansha Economic Development District of Guangzhou, Guangdong province.[35]

A Toyota Land Cruiser Prado produced by Sichuan FAW Toyota Motor
A Toyota Land Cruiser Prado produced by Sichuan FAW Toyota Motor
Sichuan FAW Toyota Motor Co

Operates a passenger car production base in the Chenghua District of Sichuan province and another in Changchun, Jilin province.[35] As of 2008, its 10,000 units/year capacity production base in Changchun makes the Toyota Prius and the Toyota Land Cruiser. The other production base it controls may make buses.[36]

Tianjin FAW Toyota Engine Co Ltd

This equally owned joint venture with Toyota makes engines at its production bases in the Xiqing District of Tianjin and at the Tianjin Economic and Technological Development Zone. Combined, both bases can produce 440,000 units annually.[36]

FAW Toyota Changchun Engine Co Ltd

Making engines at a 130,000 units/year capacity production base in the Changchun Economic and Technology Development Zone, this equally owned joint venture was established in 2004.[36]


FAW-Volkswagen Automobile Co Ltd


Established in 1991, this large-scale automobile manufacturer is a joint venture between FAW Group and Volkswagen AG which, as of 2003, have ownership stakes of 60% and 40%, respectively.[37] It manufactures Audi and Volkswagen-branded automobiles for sale in China.[38]

Chengdu FAW Co Ltd

This subsidiary of FAW's joint venture with VW controls production bases in Chengdu, Sichuan province.[39]


FAW-GM


A joint venture with General Motors that mainly produces Jiefang light-duty trucks,[40] this JV includes the Harbin Light Vehicle and FAW Hongta Yunnan factories.[41]

FAW-GM Light Duty Commercial Vehicle Co Ltd

This joint venture with General Motors mainly produces Jiefang light-duty trucks.[40]


Silk-FAW Automotive


This joint venture with US based design firm Silk EV produces high end luxury hybrid sports cars.[42]


Subsidiaries and divisions


FAW Toyota Crown
FAW Toyota Crown

FAW has at least 28 wholly owned subsidiaries and controlling shares in 18 partially owned subsidiaries. These include the wholly owned subsidiaries FAW Jiefang Truck Co Ltd and FAW Bus and Coach Co Ltd, and the publicly traded FAW Car Co Ltd, Tianjin FAW Xiali Automobile Co Ltd, and Changchun FAWAY Automobile Components Co Ltd.[8]

The following is an incomplete list.


Vehicle-producing Divisions



Chengdu FAW Automobile Co Ltd

Chengdu FAW produces Huaxi brand light and medium buses based on the Toyota Coaster.[43] Originally the Sichuan Bus Company, it became a partially-owned subsidiary in 2002 after acquisition by FAW.[43]

A Besturn B70 produced by FAW Car Company
A Besturn B70 produced by FAW Car Company

FAW Car Co Ltd

Created in 1997 from the merger of Changchun Gear Factory, the FAW No. 2 Engine Factory, the FAW No. 2 Car Factory, and the former FAW No. 1 Car Factory,[44] this publicly listed subsidiary produces cars, transmissions,[44] and engines.[45] It has a production base in western Changchun, Jilin province.[46]


FAW Bus and Coach

Founded in 1959, it produces buses sold under the Taihu brand.


FAW Hongta Yunnan Automobile Co Ltd

Created in 1997 when FAW purchased a controlling interest in Hongta Yunnan Automobile Co Ltd, this subsidiary company, as of 2003, produces 1/2-3 ton pickups and light trucks as well as license-built Daihatsu models.[47] This factory was included in the FAW-GM Light Duty Commercial Vehicle joint venture.[41]


FAW Jilin Automobile Co Ltd

Founded in 1980, this company became a wholly owned subsidiary of FAW Group in either 1987[48] or March 1991.[49] It manufactures compact trucks and buses originally based on Suzukis. More recently, Jilin participated in a five-year-long joint venture with Daihatsu.[50]


FAW Passenger Vehicle Co

As of 2012, this company has two factories and some of the products it produces carry the Oley brand.[33]


FAW Sichuan Automotive Co Ltd

Established in 1997, this part-owned subsidiary designs, produces, and markets medium and heavy truck bodies, wheels, and components for both FAW and other manufacturers.[51]


The Harbin Light Vehicle Factory

Established in 1965, this FAW Group subsidiary made military vehicles until partnering with FAW in the 1990s.[52] It has since produced pickups, Jiefang trucks, and mini-vehicles (small trucks and vans that see commercial use).[52] This factory was included in the FAW-GM Light Duty Commercial Vehicle joint venture.[41]


Other divisions



Minor joint ventures



Production bases and facilities


FAW has production bases located in 14 provinces throughout China[5] including the provinces of Guangdong,[67] Hainan,[8] Heilongjiang,[8] Jilin,[8] Liaoning,[68] Shandong,[8] Sichuan,[8] and Yunnan.[8] Non-provincial locales include Pudong[30] and Tianjin.[8]


Changchun


FAW headquarters are located in Changchun, Jilin province, and operations here include an R&D and test center.[69] Additionally, FAW has two production bases here—one produces for the FAW-Volkswagen joint venture and the other makes self-branded autos.[70]


Chengdu


An unfinished production base in the Longquan Economic Development Zone in Chengdu, Sichuan province, replaces an older Sichuan base and will produce passenger cars for a FAW-Toyota joint venture, Tianjin FAW Toyota Motor Co Ltd, when it is completed in 2010.[71]

FAW Jiefang Truck Co Ltd also has a production base here.[30]

Another site in Chengdu produces cars for FAW-Volkswagen,[39] and a second VW production base is, as of 2009, scheduled to be built in the city.[72]


Dalian


A Hybrid electric bus produced by FAW Bus and Coach Co Ltd in Dalian
A Hybrid electric bus produced by FAW Bus and Coach Co Ltd in Dalian

The Dalian division of FAW Bus and Coach Co Ltd manufactures Jiefang and Yuan Zheng brand medium and large-size buses in a production base in Dalian, Liaoning province.[32] An unfinished bus production base in at the Dalian Economic & Technological Development Zone is expected to be complete in mid-2010 and will produce hybrid buses.[68]

Another Dalian base produces engines for commercial trucks, construction equipment, and agricultural machinery.[59]


Foshan


As of 2010, 150,000 units/year production capacity FAW-VW production base will soon be built in this Guangdong province city.[67]


Hainan


Located in the sunny, southern vacation spot of Hainan island and built in 1958, Hainan Island Test Grounds is an auto testing site that includes a test track.[31] FAW Hainan Automobile Co Ltd operates FAW's southernmost production facility here.[31]

A production base on the island manufactures license-built Mazdas.


Harbin


A planned production base at the Aviation & Automobile Development Zone (Pingfang Development Zone) in the city of Harbin, Heilongjiang province, will see completion in December 2010 and produce light trucks.[52]


Shanghai


FAW Jiefang Truck Co Ltd has a production base in Pudong New Area in Shanghai.[30]


Tianjin


Plants No. 1, 2, and 3 in the city of Tianjin produce automobiles for the FAW-Toyota joint venture Tianjin FAW Toyota Motor Co Ltd.[73] Plant No. 1 is in Yangliuqing Town, Xiqing District,[73] and plants No. 2 and 3 are located in the Tianjin Economic and Technological Development Zone and began production in 2007.[73] Tianjin FAW Toyota Motor Co Ltd also has an engine plant in Tianjin.[74]


Qingdao


A FAW Jiefang Truck Co Ltd medium, heavy, and severe-duty truck production base is located in Qingdao, Shandong province.[30]


Export sales


A FAW CA1031 truck in Russia
A FAW CA1031 truck in Russia

While primarily manufacturing products for sale in its home market, FAW has exported to many countries beginning in 1957 with the sale of three commercial trucks to a businessperson in Jordan.[12]

FAW has had customers in more than 80 countries throughout the life of the company.[5] Nations it has exported products to include Egypt,[75] Iraq,[76] Kenya,[76] Mexico,[77] Myanmar,[78] Pakistan,[76] Russia,[62] South Africa, Iran,[79][80] Zimbabwe and Uruguay.[48]

FAW-Nakhchivan Automobile Plant

NAZ-Nakhchivan Automobile Plant assembles FAW cars in Nakhchivan, Azerbaijan since 2020.


See also



References


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  2. "Executives". FAW Group Corporation. Archived from the original on 2 May 2012. Retrieved 30 April 2012.
  3. "Autoline Daily". Retrieved 3 March 2022.
  4. "Financial Data". FAW Group Corporation. Archived from the original on 2 May 2012. Retrieved 30 April 2012.
  5. FAW Today Archived 2010-03-23 at the Wayback Machine FAW's 50th Anniversary Brochure
  6. "Company Profile".
  7. "2021全年汽车销量出炉,上汽卫冕,三家民营车企挤入前十_腾讯新闻".
  8. About FAW Profile FAW Official Site
  9. Products Components & Parts FAW Official Site
  10. Key Events, May 21, 1958/Aug. 1, 1958 Archived March 4, 2009, at the Wayback Machine FAW Official site
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  20. Anil K. Gupta, Toshiro Wakayama, Srini Rangan (2012). Global Strategies for Emerging Asia. John Wiley & Sons. p. 135. ISBN 9781118217979. Archived from the original on 2014-06-10. Retrieved 2016-10-11.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: uses authors parameter (link)
  21. GM, China FAW Set Up Commercial-Vehicle Joint Venture Bloomberg.com, August 30, 2009
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  38. "FAW-GM Increases Capacity, Having No Plan to Introduce GMC Yet". ChinaAutoWeb.com. Archived from the original on 2011-04-06. Retrieved 2010-09-18.
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  45. Page 39 Archived 2012-02-17 at the Wayback Machine FAW 50th Anniversary Brochure
  46. FAW Exported Mini Vans to Uruguay Archived 2008-06-11 at the Wayback Machine FAW Official Site, Jan 22, 2008
  47. World of Cars 2006·2007. Warsaw, Poland: Media Connection Sp. z o.o. 2006. pp. 231–232.
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  50. FAW Initiates 100,000-unit Light Truck Engineering Project in Harbin Archived 2010-04-20 at the Wayback Machine FAW Official Site, Jun 4, 2009
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  57. Deutz (Dalian) Engine Starts Operation Archived 2011-03-12 at the Wayback Machine FAW Official Site, Sep 18, 2007
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  59. FAW's Xiali Division Launches New C1 Hatchback in Russia Archived 2010-10-05 at the Wayback Machine FAW Official Site, Jun 11, 2007
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  63. Page 33 Archived 2016-01-14 at the Wayback Machine FAW 50th Anniversary Brochure
  64. Page 37 Archived 2011-09-29 at the Wayback Machine FAW 50th Anniversary Brochure
  65. Ready consumer cash fueling robust sales Archived 2011-11-06 at the Wayback Machine chinadaily.com.cn, 2010-10-25
  66. FAW Builds up Dalian New-energy Bus Plant Archived 2011-07-19 at the Wayback Machine FAW Official Site, Jun 24, 2009
  67. Innovation Archived 2009-08-22 at the Wayback Machine FAW Official Site
  68. Sichuan FAW-Toyota Relocates Chengdu Plant Archived 2008-07-26 at the Wayback Machine FAW Official Site, Jul 16, 2008
  69. FAW Group and VW AG Joint to Build up New Chengdu Plant Archived 2010-01-16 at the Wayback Machine FAW Official Site, May 12, 2009
  70. Home > About Us > Company Introduction > TOYOTA Motor Co., LTD. Archived 2010-11-08 at the Wayback Machine Tianjin FAW Toyota Official Site
  71. Tianjin FAW Toyota to Launch New Engine Plant Archived 2008-02-08 at the Wayback Machine FAW Official Site, Apr 20, 2007
  72. New China-made Cars Launch at Egypt Market Archived 2009-07-17 at the Wayback Machine FAW Official Site, Jul 3, 2009
  73. "FAW 50th Anniversary Brochure". Archived from the original on 2011-09-29. Retrieved 2009-08-11.
  74. FAW Exports 920 Xiali cars to Mexico Archived 2009-07-17 at the Wayback Machine FAW Official Site, Jun 25, 2009
  75. "CHINA: SUSTAINING CONFLICT AND HUMAN RIGHTS ABUSES: THE FLOW OF ARMS CONTINUES". www.amnesty.org. 10 June 2006. Archived from the original on 27 February 2017. Retrieved 2017-02-26.
  76. "فروش اقساطی کشنده فاو - قیمت کشنده فاو اتاق جدید | محصولات فاو – شرکت سیبا موتور". محصولات فاو - کامیونت فاو (in Persian). 2017-11-28. Retrieved 2020-06-19.
  77. FAW¡¯s Jiefang Brand Cement Mixers Popular in South Africa Archived 2008-01-08 at the Wayback Machine FAW Official Site, Jun 14, 2007



На других языках


[de] China FAW Group

Die China FAW Group, eine Umbenennung von First Automotive Works (FAW) (chinesisch .mw-parser-output .Hani{font-size:110%}中国第一汽车集团, Pinyin Zhōng Guó Dìyī Qìchē Jítuán – „Chinesische Automobilfabrik Nummer eins“), ist ein staatlicher Kraftfahrzeug- und Motorenhersteller in der Volksrepublik China.
- [en] FAW Group

[it] First Automobile Works

La First Automobile Works (FAW in cinese: 中国第一汽车) è il più grande produttore di automobili della Cina, e nel 2004 ha superato il milione di auto prodotte all'anno.

[ru] First Automotive Works

China FAW Group (FAW, ФАВ[3]; в переводе с англ. — «Автомобильный завод № 1») — китайская государственная автомобилестроительная компания. Старейшая китайская автомобилестроительная компания, основана в 1953 году. В списке крупнейших компаний мира Fortune Global 500 за 2022 год FAW заняла 79-е место[2]. По объёмам производства автомобилей FAW занимает второе место в Китае после SAIC Motor, в 2021 году доля на рынке составляла 13,8 %[4].



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