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A proposal
by the Indian joint venture between Tata Motors and Fiat to
include Suzuki in the new facility which is
manufacturing the Fiat Powertrain 1.3
Multijet 16v engine in India was rejected by Japan's largest maker of
small cars. |
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A proposal
by the joint venture between Tata Motors and Fiat to set
up a facility to manufacture the world's most famous
small diesel engine the 1.3 Multijet had been
rejected by Japan's largest maker of minicars, Suzuki
Motor Corporation (SMC), reports Business Standard.
"We (the Tata,
Fiat joint venture company, Fiat India Automobiles) looked
to have one plant for the 1.3 litre diesel engine of Fiat.
We had approached Suzuki for the alliance but they
disagreed," said Ratan Tata, chairman of the Tata Group,
while answering one of the queries posted by shareholders at
the company's annual general meeting recently.
SMC, instead,
through its Indian subsidiary Maruti Suzuki India (MSIL)
had opted to set up its own facility in Manesar near
Haryana. The facility, which has a capacity to produce
300,000 units a year, now produces the engine for MSIL's
Swift and Swift DZire models. All the three
companies would have made considerable savings if a joint
facility for the engine would have been brought in place,"
said an auto expert.
Lauded for its
operational benefits, the engine is regarded as one of the
most fuel efficient yet high-powered compact engines ever
produced in the diesel category. The engine is
expected to be the most widely-used diesel engine in the
country by next year. It is all set to be used by four
manufacturers in more than seven models across two segments.
General Motors
and Fiat already uses the engine in its models, while Tata
Motors plans to use it in the new Indica and possibly in the
Indigo as well. The engine was a
result of a technical collaboration between world's largest
car making company, General Motors, and Fiat, which
commenced operations more than a decade ago. The engine was
part of the settlement of a failed merger between the two
auto conglomerates. Subsequently, Suzuki also acquired the
license for commercial production of the engine.
The joint
venture company of the Tata and Fiat -- Fiat India
Automobiles (FIAPL) -- has set up a 3,00,000-engines per
year plant at Ranjangaon near Pune in Maharashtra where the
1.3 Multijet will also be produced apart from some other
petrol engines. Fiat's new
compact car, Grande Punto, which could be launched in the
last quarter of this financial year, could be powered with
the Multijet engine, company officials had said. The Italian auto
giant is also mulling selling the engine produced in India
to other original equipment manufacturers (OEMs) within the
country or internationally.
FIAPL had
recently scaled up investment in their plant to Rs 4,020
crore from Rs 1,600 crore planned in the earlier stages. The
Ranjangaon facility will now produce 2,00,000 cars, 3,00,000
engines and 3,00,000 parts and accessories for both the
companies. Maruti plans to pump Rs 2,500 crore into the
Manesar plant by 2010.
Report
courtesy of Business Standard
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