Currently reading: Tata Nano culled as demand for world’s cheapest car dies
Just one example of the £1700 city car was sold last month, a fall of 274 units from June 2017

Tata has ended production of its Tata Nano city car, which has long held the title of the world’s cheapest car.

The Indian manufacturer has experienced fast-falling demand for the Nano, with just one being sold last month – a 274 unit decrease on June 2017.

Despite costing from as little as £1700, sales of the Nano, which uses a 625cc, twin-cylinder engine developing 35bhp, have starkly contrasted the rapid rises seen in the wider Indian car market.

Experts claim that this is as much an example of the rising expectation of Indian consumers as it is a reflection of how dated the back-to-basics car, which entered production in 2008, had become.

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Tata described the Nano as its “people’s car” back when the compact four-door model first arrived. Measuring just 2.2 metres long, it’s about half the length of the Ford Focus.

The Nano was never officially sold outside India, but some have been exported.

While there are no plans for the Nano to return to production, a Tata spokesman told Bloomberg that the car in its “present form cannot continue beyond 2019”, suggesting an evolved version could be in the pipeline.

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JeremySpencer 28 May 2020

Thanks!

Thanks!

Mckayla Cole 18 September 2019

Best Vehicle

I think they shouldn't have taken this steo because a car shouldn't be taken as a luxury but as safety. People were getting car in a cheap price and I think this was very good for them. You can navigate here to get ideas from 100 research paper topics before getting start. Sales would have increased if they globalized their cars in smalls countries like Kenya.