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Volkswagen Brazil Reaches 300,000 Units in Truck and Bus Division PDF Print E-mail
Written by Newsroom   
Tuesday, 01 April 2008

Made in Brazil Volkswagen truck Volkswagen Brazil announced that its truck and bus division, based in the city of Resende, in the southeastern Brazilian state of Rio de Janeiro, has reached the figure of 300,000 vehicles produced since its inauguration, in November 1996.

The figure was reached, according to the company, after the sale of 37,720 trucks to Bertin Group, which owns a slaughterhouse by the same name but also operates in the area of cosmetics and biofuels. According to Volkswagen, this is one of the largest commercial vehicle sales contracts ever made in the country.

With the delivery, according to VW, Bertin will become one of the largest VW truck fleet owners worldwide. The company added that the vehicles are the first produced by the company to operate using up to 5% biodiesel mixed into common biodiesel while maintaining original factory characteristics.

The president at VW trucks and Buses, Roberto Cortes, added, according to a company press statement that Bertin Group has been testing a number of trucks that may operate with up to 20% biodiesel since 2006.

A spokesperson for VW informed that 47,000 vehicles were sold last year, including trucks and buses, being 11,000 exported. Apart from Brazil, the brand also sells to 31 countries, including Middle East countries.

The main importers are Argentina, Chile, Uruguay, Bolivia, Colombia, Venezuela, Paraguay, Ecuador, the Dominican Republic, Peru, Ivory Coast, Nigeria and Saudi Arabia.

The global VW Trucks and Buses headquarters are in Brazil, where the multinational has its development center for this kind of vehicle. The organization offers to the market 29 models of trucks, which range from five to 57 tons of gross weight, and eight kinds of chassis for urban buses and coaches. The factory in Resende employs around 4,000 people.

Anba

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national identity of VW
written by Lance, April 05, 2008
It's interesting how VW Ag is carefully expanding into the arena of international manufacture. The trick will be to continue to maintain the image of being "quality made in germany" to "quality made in (insert name of country here), to a point where people will forget or not care that VWs were once only made in Germany. They must never again let there level of quality slip like when they had a plant in the US in the 1980s.
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