Volvo is moving to a more regionalised business model that will help it better adapt to differing market demands and legislation in Europe, the US and China.
Under the stewardship of recently re-appointed CEO Håkan Samuelsson, Volvo Cars will devolve more power to its American and Chinese divisions while "more directly" steering its European operations from its HQ in Sweden.
The move was detailed by Samuelsson at the Financial Times Future of the Car event, shortly after Volvo announced a drastic global cost-cutting plan in response to a significant drop in sales and a "challenging external environment".
Volvo earlier confirmed that there would be job cuts globally as part of the £1.4bn savings drive, along with reductions in future investments - but Samuelsson said a shift in global operating strategy is also a crucial part of the plan.
"We are creating much more empowered regions. And this is not something happening right now which is a big surprise to us; we have seen this trend going on for around a long time. We need to produce closer to our customers, to be more agile, more faster in delivery times and to really be a local player," Samuelsson said.
He specifically highlighted Volvo's factory in South Carolina as an opportunity to strengthen the brand's footprint in the US - especially crucial now that any car built abroad is now subject to substantial import tariffs there.
"To be a strong brand in the United States, I think you need to be present industrially. That's why we built a factory last time I was in this job. I'm very glad we did that then, because now it's a strategic asset in the new world," he said.
"The US needs to be seen as a profit-making unit with its own factory, which has to be utilised much more than we are utilising it today."
Volvo also plans to leverage its position as part of China's Geely group to more specifically cater its Chinese product offering and production footprint to local demands.
"Let's make China into an empowered, much more autonomous unit, which will have a more regional approach to marketing and sales but also some local cars which we need to introduce," he said.
Meanwhile, Volvo's operations in Europe be steered "more directly" from Gothenburg.
The firm has now begun production of the EX30 for Europe at its factory in Ghent, Belgium, and will open a new factory in Slovakia within the next two years - although Samuelsson refused to say which cars would be built here.
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