Rising Material Costs: CKD Cars to be Pricier than CBU Cars in the Future?

Published by on
Editors%2 Fimages%2 F1659428163474 Ckd Cars More Expensive Featured
Automotive giant Kia cites the rising cost of materials and the increasing complexity of modern cars as the leading factors behind the cost increases of locally-assembled (CKD) cars. 

This was the message sent by Bermaz Auto executive chairman, Datuk Seri Ben Yeoh, at a press conference last Thursday (28 August). He reveals that the costs of CKD car production have tripled in recent years with new and a greater number of specifications in today's cars that require their own set of tools and processes to implement.

Yeoh brought up the cost of a specific spot welding gun as an example, explaining that using cold rolled steel would entail different specifications than using high tensile steel. This means that they would both incur different costs of investments, a trend to carry on in the future when different materials are used in the manufacturing process. 

'Plant-within-a-plant' Concept

Editors%2 Fimages%2 F1659426483745 Inokom Paint Shop(Photo Credit: Inokom)

Yeoh has clarified that he has nothing against the greenfield approach or having a new plant being built, however, he suggests a better, more efficient approach, utilising the Inokom contract to implement a plant-in-a-plant concept— citing Mazda's success when Inokom reinvested in a new paint shop to tackle the aforementioned issue with additional assembly requirements. 

“The new paint shop has exceeded everybody’s expectations – from a period of time when it was very dull, to now it is going to maximise capacity and going above its installed capacity and we have now a new paint shop coming onstream.” 

On top of that, Yeoh also brought up Malaysia's labour shortage as another potential issue when going down the greenfield route, with solutions such as automation opening another can of worms on its own. 

The Future

Editors%2 Fimages%2 F1659426595671 Inokom Body Shop(Photo Credit: Inokom)

CKD cars have always been regarded to be cheaper than CBU (locally imported) cars, so these red flags that this might not be the case anymore are alarming. Be it through Yeoh's suggested plant-within-a-plant concept or carrying on with greenfield plants, it will be interesting to see how local manufacturers tackle these rising material costs and more complex specifications to limit the costs passed on to the end users.

I want to find the highest selling price for my car within 24 hours!


Read more: What is Flood Coverage in Malaysia and Should You Get It?

0 Comments