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India automaker Mahindra finds a home in Detroit

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India automaker Mahindra finds a home in Detroit
In addition to developing vehicles, Mahindra is hoping to win the contract to make U,.S. postal vehicles
1410880291000-Alisa%20Priddle.jpg
By Alisa Priddle, Detroit Free Press 6:49 p.m. EDT July 19, 2015

635727408244306300-IMG-0360.jpg

From left, Richard Haas, CEO of the Mahindra North American Technical Center and Richard Ansell, vice president of marketing at the Mahindra North America.(Photo: Alisa Priddle/Detroit Free Press)

Many companies outsource work to India — but a major Indian company is outsourcing key automotive engineering work to Detroit even though it does not sell vehicles in the U.S.

In an interesting twist, when Mahindra & Mahindra wanted to expand its global vehicle development capabilities, it recognized there was insufficient talent in India. Executives looked at creating a technical center in Germany, Italy; England, and California, among others, before deciding Detroit was the true epicenter for automotive development and testing, said Richard Haas, CEO of the Mahindra North American Technical Center, now located in Troy.

Today the center has a staff of about 80, mostly engineers with plans to grow. Mahindra also has an electric scooter manufacturing plant in Ann Arbor that will launch production in November. The two facilities have a combined investment in Michigan of about $30 million.

And Mahindra is in the running for a $5 billion contract with the U.S. postal service to supply 180,000 vehicles a year for five years.

Someday the Mumbai-based automaker could sell SUVs and pickups in the U.S., although past goals to do so by 2010 did not come to fruition, in part due to issues with the company it selected as a distributor.

But the importance the company places on Detroit know-how is evident in the fact it established a $5-million technical center in Troy to come up with future products that might not be sold on this continent.

"Most companies locate R&D in India. We're doing the opposite by putting it in the U.S." said Richard Ansell, vice president of marketing at the Mahindra North American Technical Center.

Analyst Stephanie Brinley of IHS Automotive said having a presence here will also help Mahindra eventually break into the U.S. market, as well. And Mahindra specializes in trucks and SUVs, which are Detroit's specialty.

Mahindra established 70 years ago

Mahindra started as a steel trading company in 1945 and branched out into carmaking with a license to make Willys Jeeps for the India market. Mahindra still makes the Jeeps which are sold in India as the Thar. The SUV has not changed much from the original Jeep, with a diesel engine, manual transmission and choice of two- or four-wheel drive.

Fiat Chrysler Automobiles plans to start selling Jeeps in India this year. Mahindra officials are not sure what the ramifications will be. "It's a bit awkward," said Haas.

635727408244462302-IMG-0346.jpg

Mahindra has the license to build and sell Jeeps in India. The SUV is sold as the Mahindra Thar.(Photo: Alisa Priddle/Detroit Free Press)

Mahindra's expertise is in rugged utility vehicles. The best-known model is the Scorpio which became the SUV of choice on India's bad roads. The lineup also includes pickups, commercial vehicles and a growing number of car models.The flagship is the XUV 500 which was introduced in 2011 on the company's first global platform which is expected to yield at least three more vehicles.

The engineers are working on future vehicles, making their own parts and prototypes and validating them. They are developing the next generation of an existing Indian vehicle on a new platform, with visits from the 21-member launch team in India as the work progresses.

The U.S. crew is also working on another platform for five new vehicles and evaluating opportunities in North and South America as well as Europe and Asia, Haas said.

Labor costs are higher in the U.S. than India but cost per square foot of a facility is much more affordable, he said. And the expertise means products can be developed and tested faster.

Mahindra-made postal vehicles?

Mahindra's skills positions it well to make postal vehicles. "We are pursuing the contract because we have righthand-drive, rugged vehicles," said Ansell.

Mahindra is one of 15 companies still in the bidding after the field was whittled down in April. It is a five-step process that will reduce the contenders to five or less by fall. Each will submit a prototype for evaluation. A final decision might not come until next year.

"At $25,000-$35,000 each, it is a $5 billion contract if we win," Haas said. "We would need a facility here to make it," he said, or form partnerships.

Haas, 56, is a Detroit native who worked for Ford in posts around the world for 28 years before joining electric carmaker Tesla in Palo Alto. He left Tesla in 2011 to work for Mahindra and ran an engineering facility in Chennai.

Mahindra's desire for global expansion faced a challenge: India is a strong manufacturing base but it does not have a car culture or a large talent pool for vehicle development, Haas said.

"We needed to do something," said the engineer. "We could bring in lot of experts from around the world but that would be a difficult task and could be a hard sell." Those efforts continue, but plan B was to locate a tech center in another country.

With Detroit's density of automakers, suppliers, test facilities, government agencies and universities, "it was easy to convince people," said Haas who relocated to Detroit and formed a fledgling operation in 2013.

After a 140-building search, the current facility on Square Lake Road in Troy was chosen, renovated, blessed by a monk and became the new tech center in March 2014.

There is room to expand beyond the 80 employees.

"I spend most of my time recruiting from all over the world," he said, including Europe, South America and Australia as well as the U.S. and India.

Electric scooters on tap

Meanwhile, work continues on the GenZe electric scooter that was conceived, designed, developed and built in the U.S. The plant in Ann Arbor is making prototypes now in preparation for a November production start with plans to make about 20,000 a year.

While it was designed for the California market, Haas said he has had discussions with officials in Ferndale about having some electric scooters available to riders of the M-1 rail system now under construction in Detroit. Ride sharing is part of the GenZe model, where customers would unlock a scooter with a credit card.

World leader in tractors

Mahindra is best known for its tractors. The Indian company started building tractors in the 1960s today is the largest tractor manufacturer in the world. Its North American headquarters,Mahindra USA, is in Houston.

The diversified company also in 2011 took a controlling stake in SsangYong, the fourth-largest automaker in Korea. Mahindra also is in the resort business in India and Europe. And it has developed two "smart cities" in India that are planned communities with broad roads, amenities, water conservation, retail and residential to show cities can be made more livable. The company also provides affordable housing in India.

Mahindra is growing its IT business in both India and the U.S. Tech Mahindra has five development centers in the U.S., including Silicon Valley. There is even a small aerospace presence in the U.S.

"This is the most interesting thing I've ever done in my entire career," Haas said of working for the multifaceted company.

Contact Alisa Priddle: 313-222-5394 or apriddle@freepress.com. Follow her on Twitter @AlisaPriddle

More about Mahindra:

Mahindra & Mahindra started as a steel trading company in 1945. Today it is a $16.9-billion multinational company in 18 industries including automotive, tractors, aerospace, IT, financial services, and resorts. There are about 6,000 employees in the U.S. In Michigan Mahindra has a technical center in Troy and electric scooter factory in Ann Arbor.

Source:- India automaker Mahindra finds a home in Detroit
 
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Mahindra a is rocking high with SUV's launches
 
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India automaker Mahindra finds a home in Detroit
In addition to developing vehicles, Mahindra is hoping to win the contract to make U,.S. postal vehicles
1410880291000-Alisa%20Priddle.jpg
By Alisa Priddle, Detroit Free Press 6:49 p.m. EDT July 19, 2015

635727408244306300-IMG-0360.jpg

From left, Richard Haas, CEO of the Mahindra North American Technical Center and Richard Ansell, vice president of marketing at the Mahindra North America.(Photo: Alisa Priddle/Detroit Free Press)

Many companies outsource work to India — but a major Indian company is outsourcing key automotive engineering work to Detroit even though it does not sell vehicles in the U.S.

In an interesting twist, when Mahindra & Mahindra wanted to expand its global vehicle development capabilities, it recognized there was insufficient talent in India. Executives looked at creating a technical center in Germany, Italy; England, and California, among others, before deciding Detroit was the true epicenter for automotive development and testing, said Richard Haas, CEO of the Mahindra North American Technical Center, now located in Troy.

Today the center has a staff of about 80, mostly engineers with plans to grow. Mahindra also has an electric scooter manufacturing plant in Ann Arbor that will launch production in November. The two facilities have a combined investment in Michigan of about $30 million.

And Mahindra is in the running for a $5 billion contract with the U.S. postal service to supply 180,000 vehicles a year for five years.

Someday the Mumbai-based automaker could sell SUVs and pickups in the U.S., although past goals to do so by 2010 did not come to fruition, in part due to issues with the company it selected as a distributor.

But the importance the company places on Detroit know-how is evident in the fact it established a $5-million technical center in Troy to come up with future products that might not be sold on this continent.

"Most companies locate R&D in India. We're doing the opposite by putting it in the U.S." said Richard Ansell, vice president of marketing at the Mahindra North American Technical Center.

Analyst Stephanie Brinley of IHS Automotive said having a presence here will also help Mahindra eventually break into the U.S. market, as well. And Mahindra specializes in trucks and SUVs, which are Detroit's specialty.

Mahindra established 70 years ago

Mahindra started as a steel trading company in 1945 and branched out into carmaking with a license to make Willys Jeeps for the India market. Mahindra still makes the Jeeps which are sold in India as the Thar. The SUV has not changed much from the original Jeep, with a diesel engine, manual transmission and choice of two- or four-wheel drive.

Fiat Chrysler Automobiles plans to start selling Jeeps in India this year. Mahindra officials are not sure what the ramifications will be. "It's a bit awkward," said Haas.

635727408244462302-IMG-0346.jpg

Mahindra has the license to build and sell Jeeps in India. The SUV is sold as the Mahindra Thar.(Photo: Alisa Priddle/Detroit Free Press)

Mahindra's expertise is in rugged utility vehicles. The best-known model is the Scorpio which became the SUV of choice on India's bad roads. The lineup also includes pickups, commercial vehicles and a growing number of car models.The flagship is the XUV 500 which was introduced in 2011 on the company's first global platform which is expected to yield at least three more vehicles.

The engineers are working on future vehicles, making their own parts and prototypes and validating them. They are developing the next generation of an existing Indian vehicle on a new platform, with visits from the 21-member launch team in India as the work progresses.

The U.S. crew is also working on another platform for five new vehicles and evaluating opportunities in North and South America as well as Europe and Asia, Haas said.

Labor costs are higher in the U.S. than India but cost per square foot of a facility is much more affordable, he said. And the expertise means products can be developed and tested faster.

Mahindra-made postal vehicles?

Mahindra's skills positions it well to make postal vehicles. "We are pursuing the contract because we have righthand-drive, rugged vehicles," said Ansell.

Mahindra is one of 15 companies still in the bidding after the field was whittled down in April. It is a five-step process that will reduce the contenders to five or less by fall. Each will submit a prototype for evaluation. A final decision might not come until next year.

"At $25,000-$35,000 each, it is a $5 billion contract if we win," Haas said. "We would need a facility here to make it," he said, or form partnerships.

Haas, 56, is a Detroit native who worked for Ford in posts around the world for 28 years before joining electric carmaker Tesla in Palo Alto. He left Tesla in 2011 to work for Mahindra and ran an engineering facility in Chennai.

Mahindra's desire for global expansion faced a challenge: India is a strong manufacturing base but it does not have a car culture or a large talent pool for vehicle development, Haas said.

"We needed to do something," said the engineer. "We could bring in lot of experts from around the world but that would be a difficult task and could be a hard sell." Those efforts continue, but plan B was to locate a tech center in another country.

With Detroit's density of automakers, suppliers, test facilities, government agencies and universities, "it was easy to convince people," said Haas who relocated to Detroit and formed a fledgling operation in 2013.

After a 140-building search, the current facility on Square Lake Road in Troy was chosen, renovated, blessed by a monk and became the new tech center in March 2014.

There is room to expand beyond the 80 employees.

"I spend most of my time recruiting from all over the world," he said, including Europe, South America and Australia as well as the U.S. and India.

Electric scooters on tap

Meanwhile, work continues on the GenZe electric scooter that was conceived, designed, developed and built in the U.S. The plant in Ann Arbor is making prototypes now in preparation for a November production start with plans to make about 20,000 a year.

While it was designed for the California market, Haas said he has had discussions with officials in Ferndale about having some electric scooters available to riders of the M-1 rail system now under construction in Detroit. Ride sharing is part of the GenZe model, where customers would unlock a scooter with a credit card.

World leader in tractors

Mahindra is best known for its tractors. The Indian company started building tractors in the 1960s today is the largest tractor manufacturer in the world. Its North American headquarters,Mahindra USA, is in Houston.

The diversified company also in 2011 took a controlling stake in SsangYong, the fourth-largest automaker in Korea. Mahindra also is in the resort business in India and Europe. And it has developed two "smart cities" in India that are planned communities with broad roads, amenities, water conservation, retail and residential to show cities can be made more livable. The company also provides affordable housing in India.

Mahindra is growing its IT business in both India and the U.S. Tech Mahindra has five development centers in the U.S., including Silicon Valley. There is even a small aerospace presence in the U.S.

"This is the most interesting thing I've ever done in my entire career," Haas said of working for the multifaceted company.

Contact Alisa Priddle: 313-222-5394 or apriddle@freepress.com. Follow her on Twitter @AlisaPriddle

More about Mahindra:

Mahindra & Mahindra started as a steel trading company in 1945. Today it is a $16.9-billion multinational company in 18 industries including automotive, tractors, aerospace, IT, financial services, and resorts. There are about 6,000 employees in the U.S. In Michigan Mahindra has a technical center in Troy and electric scooter factory in Ann Arbor.

Source:- India automaker Mahindra finds a home in Detroit
I SAW A VAN SAYS MAHINDRA IN DETROIT YESTERDAY BUT THERE WAS A SCOOTER SIGN ON IT
 
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Mahindra GenZe 2.0 electric scooter secures 300 orders; US launch soon
945x753xMahindra-GenZe-2-1.png.pagespeed.ic.KqoEqTFNY8.png
Here’s what Mahindra has been cooking behind our backs, all the way in California’s Silicon Valley. This is their GenZe 2.0 electric scooter, strictly meant for the US market for now, where it has already secured 300 orders. The $2,999 (INR 2 lakh – approx.) runabout goes on sale this fall in California, Oregon and Michigan. Sales could soon expand to other states and eventually Europe.


Targeted at city and campus dwellers, the GenZe 2.0 features a 28-pound removable battery, which riders can unhook and carry inside their homes to charge, or wherever they’re headed, as long as the place has a power socket. The battery takes 3.5 hours to fully charge, giving the scooter a range of 30 miles on a single charge. A 7-inch touch-screen display announces range and speed, which will never exceed 30 miles per hour, so riders won’t need a motorcycle license. It even offers 3 driving modes, including a setting for those first learning to ride.


The GenZe 2.0 was designed in Silicon Valley with features like a secure laptop charging port under the seat and disc brakes all around. The city slicker will be retailed through recently opened, four stores in San Francisco and Portland, where electrically propelled two-wheeler are sought after more than anywhere in the US. Mahindra hopes that the GenZe will act as a springboard for the Mumbai based conglomerate to start retailing cars in the US.


Source:- Mahindra GenZe 2.0 electric scooter secures 300 orders; US launch soon | Motoroids

In other news - Indian auto component supplier Samvardhana Motherson Group is investing $150 million in a facility in Alabama to make bumpers, interior panels and other parts for Mercedes Benz - The 700,000-square-foot SMG factory will employ 650 and supply the Mercedes Benz plant in Vance, Ala.
India's Motherson to invest $150 million in Alabama plant | Plastics News
 
.
Mahindra GenZe 2.0 electric scooter secures 300 orders; US launch soon
945x753xMahindra-GenZe-2-1.png.pagespeed.ic.KqoEqTFNY8.png
Here’s what Mahindra has been cooking behind our backs, all the way in California’s Silicon Valley. This is their GenZe 2.0 electric scooter, strictly meant for the US market for now, where it has already secured 300 orders. The $2,999 (INR 2 lakh – approx.) runabout goes on sale this fall in California, Oregon and Michigan. Sales could soon expand to other states and eventually Europe.


Targeted at city and campus dwellers, the GenZe 2.0 features a 28-pound removable battery, which riders can unhook and carry inside their homes to charge, or wherever they’re headed, as long as the place has a power socket. The battery takes 3.5 hours to fully charge, giving the scooter a range of 30 miles on a single charge. A 7-inch touch-screen display announces range and speed, which will never exceed 30 miles per hour, so riders won’t need a motorcycle license. It even offers 3 driving modes, including a setting for those first learning to ride.


The GenZe 2.0 was designed in Silicon Valley with features like a secure laptop charging port under the seat and disc brakes all around. The city slicker will be retailed through recently opened, four stores in San Francisco and Portland, where electrically propelled two-wheeler are sought after more than anywhere in the US. Mahindra hopes that the GenZe will act as a springboard for the Mumbai based conglomerate to start retailing cars in the US.


Source:- Mahindra GenZe 2.0 electric scooter secures 300 orders; US launch soon | Motoroids

In other news - Indian auto component supplier Samvardhana Motherson Group is investing $150 million in a facility in Alabama to make bumpers, interior panels and other parts for Mercedes Benz - The 700,000-square-foot SMG factory will employ 650 and supply the Mercedes Benz plant in Vance, Ala.
India's Motherson to invest $150 million in Alabama plant | Plastics News
Nice......:-)
 
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Detroit? :what:

I wish them the best of luck.
 
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