Self-disqualification
Now, in order. As it becomes clear, lately this is not a Hyundai plant at all, as it becomes owned by a Russian company. Moreover, under very strange circumstances, the sale price is only 10,000 rubles, with the right of the previous owner to buy it back within two years.
But let’s move on. According to the head of the Ministry of Industry and Trade, Denis Manturov, the assembly of cars at the St. Petersburg plant is expected to begin before mid-2024. So what is the “way out of the downtime”? It turns out that it involves staff training and equipment maintenance. Does this mean that after a year and a half of downtime, the staff completely forgot how to work, disqualifying themselves and the equipment was not maintained all this time, and now it has to be taken off the ground? ruins?
And then the next question: if we talk about restoring and adapting existing technological lines, then they should produce the same Korean sedans and crossovers for which these lines were originally designed. The buyback option offered to the Koreans also indicates this.
It will seem strange if all their robots are now lost and replaced, for example, by Chinese ones. And in two years all this will be given back to Hyundai, which will again have to invest a billion in dismantling someone else’s equipment, installing and setting up its own?