Mitsubishi Motors (Thailand)

From Infogalactic: the planetary knowledge core
Jump to: navigation, search
Mitsubishi Motors (Thailand)
Subsidiary
Founded 1987
Headquarters 88 Moo 11 Phahonyothin Road, Tambon Klong Nueng, Amphoe Khlong Luang, Pathum Thani 12120, Thailand
Key people
Michiro Imai (President)
Products Automobile manufacturing
Number of employees
c. 4,000 (2004)
Parent Mitsubishi Motors (99.9%)
Subsidiaries MMC Engine Co., Ltd. (MEC)
Website Mitsubishi-Motors.co.th
File:Mitsubishi L200 2006 base.jpg
The Akinori Nakanishi-styled Mitsubishi Triton, Thailand's most successful automotive export.

Mitsubishi Motors (Thailand) Co., Ltd. (MMTh) is the Thai operation of Mitsubishi Motors Corporation. It became the first Thai automobile manufacturer to export vehicles overseas in 1988, and has remained the country's largest exporter every year since.[1]

MMTh is currently the most productive of Mitsubishi's four manufacturing facilities outside Japan, with 133,109 vehicles produced in 2006. It exported its one millionth pickup truck in October 2007.[2] In anticipation of a growth in the market for pickup trucks, Mitsubishi is investing 21 billion baht(¥1 billion) to increase local capacity to 200,000 units.[3]In November 2015, MMTh celebrated production of its four millionth vehicle.[4]

History

Mitsubishi began building trucks in Thailand in 1966, by a company called UDMI (established 1964). The Galant sedan followed in 1972 and the L200 pickup truck in 1981.[5] Subsequent to commencing exports of the L200 pickup in 1988, Mitsubishi Motors Thailand exported the Lancer to Canada in the first half of the nineties.[6]

Sittipol, a Thai Mitsubishi distributor since 1961, merged with UDMI in 1987 and formed MMC Sittipol. In 2001 Mitsubishi increased their stake from 46.2 to 99.9 percent, followed by a name change to "Mitsubishi Motors (Thailand) Co., Ltd." in November 2003.[5] A Thai-only SUV on a L200 chassis, called the Strada G-Wagon, was built in 2001-2005.

Models

The Mirage,[7] Lancer, Grandis and Triton models are all produced locally.[8] In addition, MMTh owns a subsidiary, MMC Engine Co., Ltd. (MEC), located at Laem Chabang Industrial Estates, Tambon Thung Sukhla, Si Racha District, Chonburi Province, which produces auto components.[9]

Production and sales

Year Production Domestic sales
L200 Strada Lancer Grandis Triton Outlander1 Total
1994 figures unavailable - - - 70,197 76,557
1995 - - - 71,426 78,151
1996 - - - 74,760 87,672
1997 - - - 78,413 35,191
1998 - - - 65,341 15,840
1999 - - - 77,857 19,172
2000 84,813 5,401 - - - 90,214 28,266
2001 78,845 5,302 - - - 84,147 23,665
2002 97,589 12,076 - - - 109,665 32,010
2003 95,680 7,381 - - - 103,511 33,799
2004 120,572 6,310 3,306 - - 130,188 39,564
2005 90,080 6,725 3,350 43,769 - 143,924 43,722
2006 26,901 3,165 1,089 121,687 - 152,842 26,003
2007 6,257 2,693 1,865 155,027 111 165,853 26,887
Notes:
  1. The Outlander is only import to Singaporean markets, not sold in Thailand.

(sources: Facts & Figures 2000, Facts & Figures 2005, Facts & Figures 2008, Mitsubishi Motors website)

References

  1. "Mitsubishi Grandis and Strada win Car of the Year Awards at Bangkok International Motor Show", Mitsubishi Motors press release, March 29, 2005
  2. "Mitsubishi Motors sets new record: 1,000,000 pick up trucks exported from Thailand", Mitsubishi Motors press release, October 11, 2007
  3. "Mitsubishi Vows to Continue with Expansion in Thailand", Santan Santivimolnat, Bangkok Post, June 4, 2004
  4. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  5. 5.0 5.1 Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  6. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  7. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  8. Mitsubishi Motors (Thailand) Co., Ltd., Google Finance entry
  9. "Subsidiaries and Affiliates", Mitsubishi Motors website

External links