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January 13, 2008

Welcome TATA … Pros and Cons

“Let me assure you and our critics the car we have designed will meet all safety norms and all foreign environmental criteria,” Chairman Ratan Tata said.

tata_car_416.jpg

Tata Motors has the guts to actually do what everyone has been talking about. Its about time. American Auto industry does not have the balls to seriously stick their neck out. The baby steps America’s Auto industry takes is given a lot of press, but what they offer the public is so disappointing. America needs serious lifestyle retooling. Accustomed to bigger is better, to carry your family and all it’s toys in one gas guzzling vehicle is no longer viable. Automobiles are no longer a fashion statement!

If global manufacturers can figure out how to make small, cheap cars in India, they are expected to start exporting them to other fast-growing markets where the proportion of car ownership remains small — places like Southeast Asia, Africa and the Middle East. … with a $3,000 list price, Tata could attract 300 million buyers in India by 2020. Currently, entire families commute on scooters.

Environmentalists and safety advocates are less enthusiastic. Anumita Roychowdhury, the associate director for the Center for Science and Environment in New Delhi, said the ultra-affordable vehicles would worsen India’s pollution and traffic congestion. Already, nearly 60 percent of India’s cities have pollution levels that are considered critical, she said.

Vehicles priced under 7,000 euros (about $9,870) will make up 13 percent of the world’s market by 2010, or 10 million cars a year.

Personal transportation should be just that; not an extension of your sexy image or your fat pocketbook. America’s economy has evolved to the point that a car will no longer be a fashion statement but a transport tool. Not enough people recognize this. Being employed in today’s economy is statement enough. America will have to adjust to the global energy and environmental realities … these are the wars we find ourselves in right now. World economies will squeeze the last drop of fossil fuel out of the earth before it’s gone.

Arguments that India is jumping into the American 1950s profit motive mindset, and exacerbating an environmental crisis is certainly true. America has sold its ‘Democracy is profit motive’ dream to poverty riddled societies. Meeting personal needs creates profit. Exchanging the future for profit is the name of the game America has sold. Millions of struggling humans will be happy to have transportation at the price of imitating America’s mistakes.

Thomas L. Friedman: India is in danger from an Indian-made vehicle: a $2,500 passenger car, the world’s cheapest.India should leapfrog us, not copy us. Just as India went from no phones to 250 million cellphones — skipping costly land lines and ending up with, in many ways, a better and cheaper phone system than we have — it should try the same with mass transit.

The next energy sources will have to be renewable. There are many available to choose from, we could use them all. Because they are not fully developed and available to the ordinary citizen, they are costly right now.
Indian
Enterprise follows America’s ‘heyday’ of the 1950s and will reap the same consequences. After all, history repeats.

6 Responses to “Welcome TATA … Pros and Cons”

  1. Mark Adams Says:

    I heard about this on NPR. Zero storage, no power and inadequate speed for long trips on the highway, but fine for inner-city commuting. Prices to compete with bicycles and motor scooters which make up a huge amount of the traffic in southern asia’s urban areas.

    Comes with a spare gerbil for extended use. ;-)

  2. nonnie9999 Says:

    can you imagine driving one of those over here? you’d be taking your life in your hands just pulling out of the driveway. that said, i wish local traffic was restricted to smaller, lighter, and more energy-efficient vehicles. maybe we need to get back to smaller towns, where shopping, entertainment, and most other needs are available within short distances.

  3. BossKitty Says:

    Thanks Mark, they keep the extra gerbils in the tiny glove compartment … along side that little pink bunny holding a drum. I’m happy for those families who had to pile onto scooters, but sad for the same people who have to breathe that air.

    Hey Nonnie, its too late to slice up big cities into bite size to be more practical. Until countries focus on reliable mass transit (like the future films from the 1930s) earth is doomed to finish the fossil fuel cycle with a sucking sound.

  4. The Wyldth1ng Says:

    Nifty.

  5. BossKitty Says:

    Indeed

  6. elmo345 Says:

    how fast does this thing go!