Wednesday, March 7, 2012

No Opel Junior Coming To America. Opel Tech Chief Blames American Non-Tariff Barriers

It hasn't been much of a secret that Opel is working on a small car, called the Junior, to take on BMW's Mini, or Fiat's 500. As a matter of fact, Opel had been working on the Junior since 1982. Way back when, the interior of the Junior had been designed by a new arrival in Rüsselsheim, a freshly graduated Chris Bangle. People who expected to see a Junior in Geneva were disappointed. Instead,"General Motors will launch its new small car, the Junior, at the Paris show next autumn," just-auto was told in Geneva.

The bigger news: The Junior "will be strictly for Europe and unable to challenge the global success of the Mini or take on the Fiat 500 in America, engineering head Rita Forst admitted" to just-auto. The interesting part is the alleged why.

Rita Forst laid it out to just-auto:

"The Junior is a very specific car for the European market and is so important for Vauxhall and Opel. There are a lot of markets where the Junior meets the regulations, but only in Europe. We decided not to go for 'federalization' because it would have increased the development time by one-and-half years.."

Veery interesting. Through Opel's engineering head, GM admits that a car that meets all regulations of Europe would add one-and-half years to its development time if the car is supposed to be up to U.S. specs. This from the same company that keeps (through its mouthpiece, the Alliance of Automobile Manufacturers) pounding the table to protest against non-tariff  barriers that act as a handy excuse for the absolutely atrocious sales of American autos in Japan.

QED: One of the world's most formidable non-tariff barrier is around the U.S. (and by extension Canada.) To get past it, even a GM would  have to spend inordinate amounts of time and money. If Rita Forst isn't just blowing smoke, that is.

 



from The Truth About Cars http://www.thetruthaboutcars.com




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