Apple supplier Foxconn breaks ground on electric vehicle plant in China’s Zhengzhou city
- The EV production centre will cater to ‘well-known domestic and foreign automobile brands’, the company said in a social media post
Foxconn Technology Group, which runs the world’s largest iPhone factory in the central Chinese city of Zhengzhou, has started building a “trial” electric vehicle (EV) plant there, as it aims to replicate its success as Apple’s top smartphone contractor when it comes to cars and other products.
The EV production centre will cater to “well-known domestic and foreign automobile brands”, with the goal of building the Zhengzhou Airport Economy Zone, where Foxconn’s biggest iPhone factory is based, into a “core production base for Foxconn’s new energy vehicle segment”, the Taiwanese company said in a social media post on Wednesday.
A day earlier, Foxconn reaffirmed its commitment in the region by signing a strategic partnership with the provincial government, during which company chairman and chief executive Liu Young-way said Foxconn “attaches great importance to the cooperation with Henan” and promises to “continuously be rooted and ploughing deeply in Henan,” according to the provincial government’s statement.
Henan provincial governor Wang Kai said the government “highly values Foxconn’s development in the region” and expects the company to “further expand its industrial layout” and “keep opening up to new sectors” there.
The relationship between the two parties has not always been stable. Foxconn’s production activity in Zhengzhou suffered major disruptions in 2022 after a Covid-19 outbreak led to mass walkouts and worker protests over stringent pandemic controls and wages.
The debacle caused shipment delays for the iPhone during that year’s holiday season in Apple’s home market as well as Europe, prompting the Californian giant to accelerate the shift of some production outside China, to areas including India and Vietnam.