Background
He was born in Anhui province in 1957.
仰融
He was born in Anhui province in 1957.
Only a year after the magazine Forbes proclaimed him China"s third richest businessman in 2001, Yang fled to the United States following a dispute with the Chinese government. Famous for his close association with a Chinese microvan manufacturer that would later go on to produce licensed versions of Bayerische Motoren Werke products using indigenous components, Yang has continued to be involved in the automotive industry since his flight to the United States. In the United States, Yang has been involved with at least two fraught businesses, Greentech Automotive and Hybrid Kinetic Motors. The latter is a hybrid vehicle company with a stated aim of manufacturing cars in Alabama, and the former touted plans to build all-electric vehicles in Mississippi.
Hybrid Kinetic later dropped its Alabama plans due to a funding shortfall, and Yang has distanced himself from his other American venture, Greentech Automotive.
Yang, the founding chairman of, was involved with the company during the 1990s. Some blame his immigration to the United States on a failed bid to locate a production base in Ningbo.
As Ningbo is near the rich coastal city of Shanghai, this was contrary to Chinese state policy encouraging economic growth in the poorer regions, and Yang incurred the wrath of the government of Liaoning in the attempt. In 2002 he was accused of embezzlement, and an arrest warrant was issued precipitating Yang"s flight from the country.
While Yang was in control, made a number of IPOs.
These included listing a subsidiary on the New York Stock Exchange in 1992, the same subsidiary again on the Hong Kong Stock Exchange in 1999, and that same year a different subsidiary on the Shanghai Stock Exchange. After leaving China in 2002, Rong began a start-up car company in the United States, Hybrid Kinetic Motors Corporation (SEHK: 1188). While its desire to manufacture in the United States did not come to fruition, in the early 2010s the company expressed interest in several Mainland China production base sites and in 2013 broke ground for a new facility in the Lianyungang Economic and Technological Development Zone, Lianyungang prefecture, which may produce batteries and become operational in 2018.
JAC joint venture
As of 2010 the company will enter a possible joint venture with Jianghuai Automobile selling parts in China for use in green technology vehicles.
A Tianjin, Shandong province, production base will be complete by 2013, and while the original intent was to manufacture whole vehicles, this joint venture will only supply parts. 2009 Alabama factory plan
As of 2009 the possibility of producing Hybrid Kinetic vehicles at an undeveloped site in Baldwin County, Alabama, was discussed.
2009 Mississippi factory plan
Here, plans for an auto factory fell through c. 2009 amid a weak American economy.