Prez opens Nissan’s brand-new state-of-the art assembly plant
The president, Nana
Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo, has officially opened the brand-new state-of-the art
Nissan Navara assembly plant in Tema which has the
capacity to produce 11,593 units of vehicles per shift per annum.
The plant is the
culmination of a journey that began in 2018 when Nissan became the first mover
in the country to sign a memorandum of understanding with the government to
work towards creating the Ghana Automotive Development Policy.
Nissan selected Japan
Motors, one of its two long standing distributors in the country, as its
licenced assembler in 2020. Work on the 5000 sq. m plant began shortly
afterward and today, 17 months later, the plant was officially commissioned by
the president as the first Navaras began rolling off the assembly lines.
Nissan Africa Managing
Director, Mike Whitfield, said it was an incredible joyous and emotional
experience.
“Less than eight
months ago, the Nissan plant in Rosslyn South Africa passed its final test to
be given the green light to start manufacturing the all new ‘built of more’
Nissan Navara. Right at that time, a key group from this plant graduated in the
same plant, having received extensive and intensive training on the assembling
of these vehicles.
“Just over a month
ago, this brand-new assembly plant passed its own final test – the very same
one that the Rosslyn plant had to pass because in the world of Nissan there is
only one standard – it is Nissan’s. I can tell you all, without any fear of
contradiction, that this is the most modern, most state-of the art plant
anywhere in West Africa.”
The plant, he said,
was proof of the fantastic public private partnership between the government of
Ghana, Japan Motors and Nissan Africa.
“The existence
of this plant is tribute to the passion and commitment of Japan Motors
investing US$ 9-million, which in itself would not have been possible without
the security and certainty offered by the government of Ghana’s progressive automotive
industry development policy which was signed into law in record time.
“Ghana today stands as
a benchmark for the African automotive industry, an example of what can be done
when there is a will and a vision.”
Japan Motors MD, Salem
Kalmoni, whose grandfather began what would become Japan Motors 100 years ago,
said the US $9-million investment was proof of his family’s commitment to the
country and the government, creating jobs and opportunities in the country.
“To borrow from the
Minister of Trade and Industry Alan Kyerematen; we have indeed ‘put our skin
into it’.”
Kalmoni said he hoped
that the government would now fully implement the Ghana Automotive Development
Policy, after having identified vehicle assembly and automotive component
manufacturing as a strategic anchor industry for its Ten Point Plan for Ghana’s
industrial development.
Whitfield paid tribute
too to Nissan’s other distributor in Ghana, APL Nissan.
“I am grateful too today for our continued
friendship and association with Subhi Accad and his company APL Nissan Ghana,
who together with Japan Motors are Nissan’s two sole distributors in Ghana. I
have no doubt that together these two companies will put Nissan right back up
as the top selling automotive brand in Ghana once more.”
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