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Boeing drops Bengaluru bombshell
Aerospace
company Boeing has cancelled its plans to establish a manufacturing unit in
Bengaluru. Instead, the Seattle, US-based aircraft manufacturer will now
convert its entire 36-acre land in Bengaluru into a research and development
(R&D) facility.
The decision is notwithstanding the southern city?s pre-eminence as India?s aerospace hub. The company cited muted demand because of Covid-19 as the reason for the withdrawal of plans. The state high-level clearance committee has approved the request.
India has grown to be one of Boeing?s biggest markets. The original approval for the Boeing manufacturing plant dates back two years, when an investment to the tune of Rs 1,150 crore was planned on the land plot near the Kempegowda International Airport (KIA), making it Boeing?s largest plant outside its US facility. Boeing India employs about 3,500 people in its facilities in New Delhi, Hindan (in the NCR), Rajali (Tamil Nadu) and Mumbai, apart from engineering and technology units in Chennai and Bengaluru.
The drastic
decision comes less than two weeks after a vandalism incident at a factory near
Bengaluru, where employees went on a rampage. The incident took place at
Winstron, the Taiwanese manufacturer of iPhone components located in
Narasapura, about 52 km northeast of the IT city. The incident proved to be
a can of worms, as stunned and unprepared state and central governments rushed
to intervene to prevent exactly the kind of action Boeing has taken. Winstron?s
questionable ethical practices also came to the fore after the incident.
Apple?s key
manufacturer Wistron invested nearly Rs 3,000 crore in the production unit for
the manufacture of iPhone 7 and iPhone SE devices. The Karnataka government had
gleefully supported the establishment of the factory through a generous
incentive for the acquisition of over 40 acres of land. Unfulfilled salary
promises for engineers (allegedly cut from a promised Rs 21,000 to Rs 12,000)
and non-engineering graduates (cut to Rs 8,000) and unfair working conditions of
12-hour workdays, and contractual rather than employment deals did not go down
well with a workforce increasingly disgruntled by the continued onslaught of
the coronavirus.
After
Apple, the US owner of the iPhone, took stock of the situation, Winstron
admitted to payment gaps. The company initially claimed damages of Rs 437
crore, but later, informed the Taiwan Stock Exchange that the violence did not
cause significant material damage to the warehouse itself, or to the
manufacturing equipment, and that the extent of the damage was around Rs 52
crore.
Companies have been grappling with human resource issues since the pandemic struck, some innovating while others have struggled to cope. The Winstron incident?s impact may prove to be deleterious if other MNCs follow Boeing, or back off from impending investments in manufacturing in India.
Image: Boeing's Bengaluru facility.
Image source: Boeing website.
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