Marking a fresh
beginning in India and coinciding with the visit of the Fiat
Group Chairman, a Fiat Palio, the first car produced by the
Fiat-Tata Motors joint venture, was last Tuesday morning
rolled out from the Ranjangaon facility near Pune.
In 2008, Fiat will introduce its latest model Fiat Grande
Punto and the yet to be introduced Fiat Linea in the three
box sedan segment in the Indian market. Fiat Auto and Tata
Motors signed a collaborative agreement last Wednesday to
give a concrete shape to their 50:50 joint venture that was
announced in December 2006.
Fiat Group
Chairman Luca Cordero di Montezemolo who arrived in Mumbai
as the head of a 450-member Italian business delegation to
India in an interview with HT said, “We are looking at
different possibilities as we are committed to the Indian
market. We found Tata as a perfect partner to grow our
business here. In three years, Fiat will emerge as a strong
player in India.” He said that the agreement will be signed
between him and Tata Group chairman Ratan Tata in the
presence of Indian Commerce minister Kamal Nath and Prime
Minister of Italy Romano Prodi. “I met him this morning for
long hours and we are good friends. Tatas are our good
business partners and since we will complement each other,
the Fiat brand is bound to grow here,” he said.
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In 2008, Fiat will introduce its latest model Fiat
Grande Punto and the yet to be introduced Fiat Linea
in the three box sedan segment in the Indian market. |
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Marking a fresh beginning in India and coinciding
with the visit of the Fiat Group Chairman, a Fiat
Palio, the first car produced by the Fiat-Tata
Motors joint venture, was last Tuesday morning
rolled out from the Ranjangaon facility near Pune. |
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"I don’t want to comment on what went wrong in India in the
past but now with this extremely important partnership with
Tatas we are in safe hands,” di Montezemolo added in the
interview.
Once the two new
cars are introduced, the existing Fiat models will be
gradually phased out. Ranjangaon due its close proximity to
Tata’s Pune plants will be the only facility from where Fiat
cars will be produced in addition to one more new car to be
jointly developed for Tata Motors. Fiat’s Kurla facility
from where production was stopped three months ago has been
closed down. All key machineries have been shifted to the
Ranjangaon facility, which was lying defunct till six months
ago. Upon completion of a Voluntary Retirement Scheme (VRS)
at the Kurla unit, Fiat will soon be selling this prime
land.
Article
courtesy of the
Hindustan Times
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