Automotive industry in Romania


Much of the Romanian manufacturing industry consists of branch plants of foreign firms, though there are some important domestic manufacturers, such as Automobile Dacia, Ford Romania, Roman Braşov and Igero. In 2018, est. 500,000 automobiles were produced in Romania.

Overview

During the Communist period, Romania was one of the largest automobile producers in Central and Eastern Europe, however the industry declined after the 1989 revolution. Previously, other domestic manufacturers such as Tractorul Braşov, ARO and Oltcit existed, however they eventually went bankrupt due to botched privatization in the 1990s. Since 1990, several foreign companies, including Mercedes, Audi, Hyundai, Volvo, Toyota, and Peugeot, expressed interest in opening branch plants in Romania. In 2014, the Romanian automotive industry ranks fifth in Central and Eastern Europe, behind that of the Czech Republic, Hungary, Slovakia, and Poland.
Ford bought the Automobile Craiova plant for $57 million, planning to produce automobiles at a rate of over 300,000 units a year by 2010. Ford said it would invest €675 million in the former Daewoo car factory and that it would buy supplies from the Romanian market worth €1 billion. In September 2009, the company began to assemble the Ford Transit Connect in Craiova, and in 2012, production of the new Ford B-Max was started.
Robert Bosch GmbH, the world’s largest supplier of automotive components will invest as much as 60 million euros in a new factory in Jucu - Romania. The new Bosch facility will produce electronic components for automobiles, and will create about 2,000 jobs.
Dacia Logan was the top-selling new car in Central and Eastern Europe in the first half of 2007 with 52,750 units sold, ahead of Skoda Fabia, Skoda Octavia, Opel Astra and Ford Focus.
In 2012, Dacia launched four new models, the Lodgy and the Dokker, and the second generations of the Logan and Sandero, whereas Ford launched their new mini MPV, the B-Max. The both manufacturers also introduced two new and technologically advanced turbocharged three-cylinder petrol engines, which are locally produced and represented premieres in their segments.

Active manufacturers

201920182017201620152014201320122011201020092008200720062005200420032002200120001999
Cars490,412476,769359,240358,861387,171391,422410,959326,556310,243323,587279,320231,056234,103201,663174,53898,99775,70665,26656,77464,18188,313
Commercial vehicles00104456123811,20924,98927,32517,17814,2527,60911,93420,64423,18819,54114,19011,98713,98418,584
Total490,412476,769359,250359,306387,177391,434410,997337,765335,232350,912296,498245,308241,712213,597194,802122,18595,24779,45668,76178,165106,897
Growth2.86%31.09%-0.02%-7.2%-1.1%-4.8%21.7%0.8%-4.5%18.4%20.9%1.5%13.2%9,6%59.4%28.3%19.9%15.6%-12.0%-26.9%

199519901989198019701960
Cars93,00094,000160,000124,00059,00012,000
Commercial vehicles
Total93,00094,000160,000124,00059,00012,000
Growth

Defunct manufacturers