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Citroen top (3) engine revelation May 29, 2009

Posted by richard in : Green cars , trackback

CITROEN wants to become Europe’s third-largest brand.

No, I’m not sure how, either. Right now, it’s seventh-largest.

citroen-top-3-engineSixth? Its partner, Peugeot. So, a right old odd statement for new chief Jean-Marc Gales to make, then. I’m still puzzling over it. But what also caught my eye in the Automotive News interview he gave was another revelation.

That Citroen doesn’t need to produce 6 or 7 million cars to survive and thrive. Because, instead, it enjoys economies of scale from compnents alliances with other car makers. Meaning it can make big-number money on smaller-number car production.

Take engines. Citroen co-operates with Ford and BMW on them. Which, Gales tells Automotive News, are the most expensive parts to develop in a car. Pair up, share the costs with a partner or two, and that’s a whole heap of cash you don’t have to claw back in higher-volume efficiencies of scale.

But yet something else grabbed my attention in what he said. Engines remain the most expensive bit of all, aye? Well, I’ll be.

Explains a lot, mind. Why the VW TDI is omnipresent. Why car makers are so willing to sign up to co-opt deals. Why the Ford 1.25-litre Zetec is a decade and a half old.

citroen-top-3-engine-1And why electric or fuel cell cars can’t be that far away, surely.

Yes, they’re expensive. But if developing tomorrow’s combustion engines is also heinously dear, won’t car makers soon consider designing a new generation of IC engines to be economically unviable?

Car brands always look to the future. And, Lord knows, it ain’t in fossil-fuel-hungry ICs. Developing a new range to meet, say, 2012/2015 emissions legislation won’t be easy. Or cheap.

Whether Citroen will indeed be in the EU Top 3 by then is, of course, another matter entirely.

bmwblog and UK car dealer agree

Image of the week: 4 April 2009

Fuel economy economical with the truth?

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