Australia,
New Zealand
The joint venture will manufacture traction converters and drive systems for medium-speed, regional, and metro trains. Following Tata Group’s acquisition of the Czech Republic’s largest bus factory last year, the transaction marks another major expansion of Indian investment into Czech industry.
Nothing now stands in the way of a rail-sector
partnership between the Czech Škoda Group and India’s industrial giant Tata
Group. The European Commission has approved the transaction, which was
announced last summer.
The two groups will establish a joint venture
named Target JV, formed by subsidiaries of both companies. On the Czech side,
the partner is Rolling Stock Components, part of Škoda Transportation, while
the Indian partner is TATA AutoComp Systems.
The European Commission concluded that the
notified transaction does not raise competition concerns, given its limited
impact on the European Economic Area.
The joint venture will focus on the production
of traction converters and drive systems for medium-speed trains, regional
trains, and metro vehicles. Supplies will be directed primarily to the Indian
market. According to Škoda, the project represents an investment of several
million euros, although the exact ownership structure of the joint venture has
not been disclosed.
The development and manufacture of electrical
equipment and components for rail vehicles is one of Škoda Group’s core
business pillars. Through this partnership, these components will now also be
produced in India.
TATA AutoComp Systems already operates ten
joint ventures with automotive component manufacturers. Through these
partnerships, it produces engine cooling systems, automotive batteries, battery
packs for electric vehicles, battery cooling systems, electric motors, and
chargers. The company operates a total of 68 manufacturing plants across India.
Although the joint venture is primarily focused
on the Indian market, it represents another significant expansion of Indian
capital into Czech industry. Last year, Tata Group acquired the largest bus
manufacturing plant in the Czech Republic — Iveco in Vysoké Mýto. Until then,
Iveco had been controlled by Italy’s Agnelli family through its investment
company Exor.
Tata Group acquired the Iveco Group in a
transaction valued at EUR 3.8 billion. The deal excluded the defence division
Iveco Defence Vehicles and Astra, which will be taken over by the Italian
state-controlled company Leonardo. Iveco’s facility in Vysoké Mýto remains the
company’s largest bus manufacturing plant.
Source: https://zdopravy.cz
Author: CzechTrade Sydney