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FOCUS-VW gambles on ride-hailing to break through African roadblocks

In This Article:

* Global automakers seeking to crack African markets

* VW testing new ride-hailing business in Rwanda

* Hopes to expand in Africa starting with Ghana, Ethiopia

* Loss-making Uber, Bolt already entrenched in major markets

By Joe Bavier and Clement Uwiringiyimana

JOHANNESBURG/KIGALI, Sept 26 (Reuters) - When Volkswagen's Africa boss Thomas Schaefer set out to conquer the continent, he quickly realised he needed more than a flashy new product. He needed a new business model.

Study after study showed the same thing: there was no demand for new cars. Low purchasing power and a lack of financing put them out of the reach of most Africans, while competition from used imports gave buyers a cheaper alternative.

So Schaefer is placing a $50 million bet on a new business built around ride-hailing and car-sharing. And VW is using Rwanda – a small central African nation with a growing reputation for innovation – as its laboratory.

"It was almost an industrial experiment," Schaefer told Reuters.

The German carmaker's project was launched with some fanfare last December in the capital Kigali but since then scant information has been disclosed about how it has progressed.

VW told Reuters the app for its "Move" ride-service now had over 23,000 registered users in Kigali. However only around 2,200 of those are active users - a fairly modest uptake so far in the city of 850,000 people.

In July, the ride-hailing service averaged 384 rides per day, a figure VW said it wanted to double.

It may be a longshot but, if successful, the Rwandan gamble could help plot a future course for Volkswagen, and others, in Africa's challenging auto sector by securing a foothold in the region's rapidly growing ride-hailing space.

Industry experts are divided on the merits of the plan, with some questioning whether VW can compete with the likes of Uber and Bolt in Africa or, in light of those companies' losses, if it should even try.

While VW sees Kigali is an ideal test ground, offering a data sample that's statistically significant at a reasonable cost, critics say the city - where Uber and Bolt are absent - is not an accurate gauge of conditions in bigger markets.

Schaefer cautioned that the experiment was still in its early stages, adding he'd like to give the business model a two-year test run before assessing it.

"Luckily our headquarters leaves us alone. They just say, do what you need to do."

And though it hasn't yet set a timeframe, Volkswagen told Reuters it was already looking to Ghana in West Africa and Ethiopia, a rapidly reforming market of some 100 million people, as initial targets for an expansion of its mobility business.