Claas celebrates 20 years tractor production

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Exactly 20 years ago, on 23 February 2003, Helmut Claas signed the agreement to acquire a majority stake in Renault Agriculture, the tractor division of the Renault Group in Le Mans, France. Since then, Claas has gradually consolidated its position as a full system provider on the international stage and invested in efficiency- and productivity-boosting innovations, along with state-of-the-art production processes.


The 23 February 2003 signaled a reshuffling of the cards in the global agricultural machinery sector. Having acquired a majority stake in Renault Agriculture, followed by its complete acquisition in 2008, Claas graduated from harvesting equipment specialist to full system provider. The company added standard and specialist tractors to its product range to seamlessly complement the flagship Xerion built in Harsewinkel, Germany. The signing of the agreement between Helmut Claas and Renault S.A board member Patrick Faure on the eve of the SIMA tradeshow in Paris generated a significant amount of media coverage following its announcement. By the end of April, the staged acquisition had been approved by the Cartel Office.

From 1 October the factory in Le Mans began switching the colour scheme from Renault Orange to Seed Green and from 1 November 2003 all models for new and emerging markets rolled off the assembly line in Claas corporate colours. With the product range now complete, Claas was able to display a “full line-up of modern products” in cluding tractors, at Agritechnica 2003.

Work on the development of the Axion 800 large tractor also started in late 2003 and barely three years later, the new tractor was added to the Claas sales range. This marked the first step in the gradual replacement of the Le Mans product portfolio: over time, the Celtis, Ares and Atles were rebranded as the Arion and Axion.

Industry-defining innovations

The new Arion and Axion tractors paved the way for various award-winning innovations which came to define the industry: the large, high-contrast Cebis terminal for the Axion and later also the Arion 500 and 600 series; the Panoramic cab for the Arion 400; Telemetics for fleet management; the Axion Terra Trac, which was the first half-track tractor with full suspension and Cemos, the self-learning, dialogue-based operator assistance and process optimisation system for the Arion and Axion Cmatic.

The success of the Claas tractor range, experienced by customers and measured in independent tests, can be attributed to a team of developers based at group-wide Claas sites whose primary aim is to build efficient and productive tractors for farmers and contractors throughout the world. Expertise in Terra Trac crawler tracks and Cemos system and process intelligence at Claas Industrietechnik in Paderborn, is combined with electronics expertise from Claas E-Systems in Dissen and the standard tractor development capabilities in Vélizy. Together, they are already researching and developing the next generation of tractors from Le Mans.

More than 80 million euros investment

But research and development is not the only focus of investment. Claas is also rolling out state-of-the-art production processes and ergonomic workstations. Modernisation projects worth more than 80 million euros have been completed since 2003. The largest and most important of these was the Claas Forth initiative, which saw production elevated to a new level when it was launched at the end of 2020. The Le Mans factory now counts as most up-to-date, deploying driverless transport systems (known as autonomous guided vehicles or AGVs) and artificial intelligence (AI) in logistics. A new visitor centre modelled on the Technoparc in Harsewinkel recently opened there too.

200,000 tractors from Le Mans within reach

While the 150,000th Claas standard tractor left the Le Mans factory in spring 2019, the 200,000 mark is expected to be reached in the 20th anniversary year. Today Claas Tractor in Le Mans produces more than 60 different models from 75 to 445 hp, from simple tractors for markets with less stringent emissions standards such as Turkmenistan or Africa to the high-volume Arion 400 mainly for the European market and the Axion 900 Terra Trac high-tech large tractor for the global market. Today the Le Mans factory exports tractors to 80 countries around the world, including North America as of 2019.





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