Skip to main content

Hella to manufacture electronic parts in Brazil

Hella, a leading supplier of automotive lighting and electronics, will manufacture electronic products in Brazil in partnership with Sao Paulo-based Emicol, one of Brazil's leading producers of electronic and electro-mechanical components.
May 1, 2012 Read time: 1 min
226 Hella, a leading supplier of automotive lighting and electronics, will manufacture electronic products in Brazil in partnership with Sao Paulo-based 5397 Emicol, one of Brazil's leading producers of electronic and electro-mechanical components.

Production of Hella body-control modules for a major global automotive manufacturer is expected to begin within the next 12 months at an Emicol Eletro Eletronica facility in Itu in the State of Sao Paulo, according to Dr. Martin Fischer, CEO of Hella's Electronics Division in the Americas. He also said that Hella sees the potential for considerable growth in Latin America for products such as accelerator pedal sensors, throttle position sensors, intelligent battery sensors and other electronic products.

Fischer noted that Hella recently completed a 50,000-square-foot addition at its San Jose Iturbide electronics plant north of Mexico City. This expansion will enable the company to increase production in a variety of components for customers in the US, Mexico, Brazil and Argentina, including accelerator pedal sensors, vacuum pumps, body control modules, transmission range

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Vision technology is bringing 2024 into sharp focus
    January 9, 2024
    What vision trends should we be looking out for? AI? Autonomous vehicles? Video analytics? Let’s ask the experts
  • Electric buses: more billion dollar orders
    August 3, 2015
    China will spend up to one trillion dollars on electric buses over the coming 15 years according to analysts IDTechEx. This will reduce the impact of over 22.5 trillion dollars from air pollution over that time, at least one percent of GDP. More insurrection will occur if corrective action is insufficient because hundreds of thousands are dying from traffic pollution and far more are suffering resultant serious disease. According to the World Health Organisation (WHO), outdoor air pollution caused 3.7 m
  • More Chile scheduling for Optibus
    May 19, 2025
    Metropol Group works within Santiago's Metropolitana de Movilidad
  • Adaptive traffic control drives financial benefits
    July 24, 2012
    Prof. Klaus Banse, President of ITS Colombia and Ing. Robert Miranda, Head of the Traffic Management and Control System of Cartagena de Indias, Columbia, outline early cost benefits of an adaptive traffic control system. At the beginning of this year, Cartagena de Indias, located on the north coast of Colombia in the Caribbean, implemented a new adaptive traffic control system on 52 intersections with an investment of US$4.5 million.