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Goeschel to leave BMW in August

BMW's research and development chief Burkhard Goeschel will leave the German carmaker as part of a management reshuffle

Sixty-year-old Goeschel, a key figure in the Grand Prix Manufacturers' Association (GPMA), will step down in August.

The supervisory board has appointed Klaus Draeger, 49, to replace him.

Currently Draeger is director of the development department with responsibility for the BMW 5, 6 and 7 series.

BMW, the world's biggest premium carmaker, has also appointed Norbert Reithofer as its chief executive, with effect from September 1.

Reithofer will succeed Helmut Panke, whose contract expires in May 2007. Panke turns 60 in August - an age at which BMW's board traditionally does not extend contracts for management board members.

Reithofer, who currently is a management board member for BMW with responsibility for production, joined the company in 1987. He has held various positions at BMW, including the head of the Rosslyn plant in South Africa and head of the Spartanburg operation in the United States.

Panke has been with BMW for 24 years and joined the management board in 1996. BMW said he would not have an offical role with the company from September but would remain with the firm.

In addition, it is not known yet what Panke plans to do after his contract expires in 2007, a BMW spokesman said. Currently there are no positions seen coming up on BMW's supervisory board that Panke could take, the spokesman added.

The supervisory board said that Frank-Peter Arndt, 50, will succeed Reithofer with responsibility for production. Arndt is currently head of BMW's Dingolfing plant.

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