Kia's LPG-powered 1-ton truck Bongo Turbo Many economists are trumpeting weak business conditions for the coming months. But an economic slowdown isn’t all that bad for Hyundai Motor Co. and Kia Corp., which are enjoying a renewed boom in the small truck market.
According to industry sources on Monday, Hyundai Transys Co., a Hyundai Motor Group affiliate that produces automotive parts such as transmissions and axles, in mid-February began extra work beyond the usual restrictions.
In Korea, employees at major businesses are banned from working more than 52 hours a week. However, with employee consent and approval from the labor ministry, companies can ask them to work an additional 12 hours a week for up to three months should an exceptional case arise such as a sudden surge in product demand or short-term R&D requests.
A Hyundai Transys official said some employees at divisions that produce automatic transmissions for liquefied petroleum gas-powered one-ton trucks manufactured by Hyundai Motor and Kia, the two car-making units of South Korea’s top automaker, Hyundai Motor Group, are working overtime.
The Hyundai Porter compact truck The employees are currently working for up to 64 hours a week – the first such overtime since 2021 when the global auto industry suffered from a severe parts supply shortage caused by the outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic.
SLUGGISH EV SALES
"With sluggish sales of electric cars, demand for combustion engine vehicles is rising again. So, we are also busy producing transmissions. Demand is expected to rise at a faster pace in the latter half of this year given the economic slowdown,” said a Hyundai Transys official.
As of Feb. 1, buyers of the new LPG-powered Hyundai Porter must wait for four months to receive the vehicles they ordered. Up to three months for deliveries of the new LPG Kia Bongo, according to Hyundai Motor Group.
“Last month, half of new car purchase requests were for the Porter. Some customers, knowing they can’t buy a new car right away, are turning to the used car market to buy small trucks,” said a Hyundai Motor dealer in Seoul.
The Kia Bongo compact truck According to Seoul-based automotive data provider CarIsYou, the Hyundai Porter and the Kia Bongo sold 11,070 units and 6,393 units, respectively, in the secondhand car market in Korea last month.
With those figures, the Porter and the Bongo ranked first and second, respectively, followed by the Kia Morning compact sedan, which sold 3,950 units.
The carmakers instead have begun building the same models with a next-generation 2.5-liter LPG-powered T-LPDi turbo engine or making them all-electric.
Diesel vehicles pull out of the car market with strengthened environmental regulations The two pickups have been widely used by delivery service operators in Korea for two decades. The production of the 1-ton Kia Bongo automatic transmission diesel model – one of the most popular such vehicles – already ceased on July 14.
Diesel vehicles pull out of the car market with strengthened environmental regulations.
Under the government’s strengthened environmental regulations, delivery service providers were banned from registering new diesel vehicles starting in January.
The government grants up to 9 million won ($6,757) in subsidies for those who transition to LPG vehicles from diesel cars.
The termination of the production of the diesel compact trucks is also in line with the tougher Euro 7 emission rules, Hyundai Motor Group said.
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