World's Lowest Priced Car Tata Nano Officially Launched

Tata Nano

By Zack Newmark
March 23, 2009 7:00 PM
Filed Under: Asian, Tata

The ultra-low priced Tata Nano is now available for purchase in India. Orders are now being taken for the three different models, with the car hitting showrooms India-wide on 1 April. Delivery of the cars will begin in July.

Tata's affordable city car starts at 1 Lakh, or 100,000 Indian Rupees. In today's exchange rate, that corresponds to just under 2,000 USD, or about 1,450 euros.

Because of an expected rush on vehicle purchases, the company has put in a selection process where customers may apply to own one of the first 100,000 units produced. All those who apply and put down a deposit by 25 April will be put into a random drawing to determine the new owners. Application fee is Rs. 300 ($6), with the deposit costing Rs. 3000 ($60).

Don't worry; if you do not get chosen to be one of the first 100,000, you will have the option of taking your deposit back, or earning 8.5% interest on the deposit against the price of the car. By 2010, the Sanand plant in Gujarat, India, should be producing as many as 350,000 vehicles per year.

Built with an all-new aluminum 2-cylinder 33hp 624 cc petrol engine, the four-speed car comes as the Nano Standard, Nano CX, and Nano LX. The Standard comes only in three color choices, with a folding rear seat. The CX has heating and air conditioning, five colors to choose from, two-tone seats, assisted braking, and a parcel shelf. Step up to the LX and you get power windows and locks, fog lamps, mobile phone charger, and rear spoiler.

Of the car, Tata chief Ratan N. Tata said, "The Nano represents the spirit of breaking conventional barriers. From the drawing board to its commercial launch, the concept, development and productionisation of the car has overcome several challenges."

"I hope it will provide safe, affordable, four-wheel transportation to families who till now have not been able to own a car. We are delighted in presenting the Tata Nano to India and the world," he continued in a press release.

The company also showed off a proposed European model at this month's Geneva show. It is slightly larger than the Indian model, and would have a more powerful three-cylinder aluminum engine.


Press Release (Click to expand)

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Tata Motors today announced the commercial launch of the Tata Nano, keenly awaited across India since its unveiling on January 10, 2008. The Tata Nano is BS-III* compliant and comes with an all-new 2-cylinder aluminium MPFI 624 cc petrol engine mated to a four-speed gear box and will be available in three variants. The cars will be on display across the country at Tata Motors Passenger Car dealerships and other select authorised outlets from April 1st.

Speaking at a Press Conference, the Chairman of Tata Sons and Tata Motors, Mr. Ratan N. Tata, said, “The Nano represents the spirit of breaking conventional barriers. From the drawing board to its commercial launch, the concept, development and productionisation of the car has overcome several challenges. It is to the credit of the team at Tata Motors that a car once thought impossible by the world is now a reality. I hope it will provide safe, affordable, four-wheel transportation to families who till now have not been able to own a car. We are delighted in presenting the Tata Nano to India and the world.”

The Tata Nano is currently being manufactured at the company’s Pantnagar plant in Uttarakhand in limited numbers. The new dedicated plant, at Sanand in Gujarat, will be ready in 2010 with an annualised capacity of 350,000 cars.

THE THREE VARIANTS

The Tata Nano offers an incredibly spacious passenger compartment which can comfortably seat four adults. With a length of just 3.1 metres, width of 1.5 metres and height of 1.6 metres, the Tata Nano has the smallest exterior footprint for a car in India but is 21% more spacious than the smallest car available today. A high seating position makes ingress and egress easy. Its small size coupled with a turning radius of just 4 metres, makes it extremely manoeuvrable in the smallest of parking slots.

The three trim levels and their key features available at launch are:

Tata Nano Standard (BSII* and BSIII*): The standard version, in three colour options, single-tone seats, and fold-down rear seat;

Tata Nano CX (BSII* and BSIII*): In five colour options, with heating and air-conditioning (HVAC), two-tone seats, parcel shelf, booster-assisted brakes, fold-down rear seat with nap rest;

Tata Nano LX (BSIII*): With the features of CX plus complete fabric seats, central locking, front power windows, body coloured exteriors in three premium colours, fog lamps, electronic trip meter, cup holder in front console, mobile charger point, and rear spoiler. Many of these features are not available on current entry-level small cars in the country.

PERFORMANCE & SPECIFICATIONS

Performance: The 2-cylinder engine – delivering 35 PS @ 5250 rpm and a torque of 48 Nm @ 3000 rpm – enables the car to have a top speed of 105 kmph and negotiate inclines with a gradeability of 30%.

Fuel efficiency: 23.6 km/litre, certified by the Automotive Research Association of India (ARAI) under mandated test conditions, which is the highest for any petrol car in India.

Emission: The high fuel efficiency, coupled with a low kerb weight of 600 kg, ensures that the Tata Nano – at 101 gm / km – has the lowest CO2 emission amongst cars in India. The Tata Nano is BS-III* compliant and is BS-IV* ready. It is also available in BS-II* norms.

Safety: The Tata Nano’s safety performance exceeds current regulatory requirements – it passes the roll-over test and offset impact, which are not regulated in India. It has an all sheet-metal body, reinforced passenger compartment, crumple zones, intrusion-resistant doors, besides mandatory seat belts and complies fully with existing Indian safety standards. Tubeless tyres – among which the rear ones are wider endowing extra stability – enhance safety.

Warranty: 18 months or 24,000 km, whichever is earlier.

THE BOOKING PROCESS

In view of the expected significant demand and limited production capacity initially until the Sanand plant is fully ramped up to capacity, the Tata Nano will be available through a booking mode.

Tata Motors has entered into an exclusive agreement with the State Bank of India to manage the booking process.

The sale of application forms and acceptance of booking will start from April 9th 2009 till the end of day April 25th 2009. The application forms will be available at a price of Rs. 300, with a range of offers from select associate Tata Group companies. The application forms will be available at over 30,000 locations in about 1,000 cities through Tata Motors Passenger Car dealerships, State Bank of India and its branches, its subsidiaries and associates, other preferred financiers, and outlets of Westside, Croma, ‘World of Titan’ and Tata Indicom exclusive stores.

After collecting the forms, customers have two options. They can either pay the entire booking amount themselves or seek financing of the booking amount.

For those who seek financing, Tata Motors has entered into agreements with 15 preferred banks/NBFCs for the Tata Nano booking loan product. The booking product offered by these banks will enable a Tata Nano to be booked by paying an amount starting Rs. 2999/- only. Their chosen financier will directly submit their application forms to the State Bank of India on their behalf.

Those, who choose to themselves pay their entire booking amount, can submit their application forms to State Bank of India through 1,350 notified branches in 850 cites, and also at Tata Motors Passenger Car dealerships, Westside and Croma outlets. Option to submit bookings online is available at www.tatanano.com.

Within 60 days of the closure of bookings, Tata Motors will process and announce the allotment of 100,000 cars in the first phase of deliveries, through a computerised random selection procedure. These 100,000 allotments will be price protected for the launch prices till delivery of the cars but the booking amounts will not bear any interest for the customers. Deliveries will commence from July 2009.

Applicants have the option to retain their booking deposit, even if they do not get allotment in the first phase. Those who choose this option will be eligible for interest on their deposit, effective from the date of announcement of allotment of the second phase, at a rate of 8.5% for retention period between one year to two year and 8.75% for a retention period of more than 2 years. Allotment of retainees will be simultaneously communicated, along with the allotment of the first 100,000 cars.

PREFERRED FINANCIERS

Tata Motors has entered into agreements with 15 preferred banks/NBFCs for the Tata Nano booking loan product. The preferred financial institutions are: State Bank of India, Tata Motor Finance, State Bank of Patiala, ICICI Bank, State Bank of Travancore, State Bank of Mysore, State Bank of Hyderabad, State Bank of Bikaner and Jaipur, State Bank of Indore, Axis Bank, Punjab National Bank, Federal Bank, Corporation Bank, Indian Bank, and the Central Bank of India. The updated list and details are available at www.tatanano.com .

MERCHANDISE AND ACCESSORIES

The Tata Nano comes with an attractive range of accessories and merchandise. The range of merchandise includes a Nano phone, Nano watch, T-Shirts, etc. and will be made available online at www.tatanano.com as well at all Tata Motors Passenger Car dealerships, Westside & Croma outlets. Tata Indicom will also market the Nano phone and Titan the Nano watch.

Accessories include alloy wheels, body kits, decals etc., to customise the Tata Nano to individual tastes. Details are available at www.tatanano.com .

 

About Tata Motors

Tata Motors is India's largest automobile company, with revenues of US$ 8.8 billion in 2007-08. Through subsidiaries and associate companies, Tata Motors has operations in the UK, South Korea, Thailand and Spain, besides India. Among them are Jaguar Land Rover, and an industrial joint venture with Fiat in India. With over 4 million Tata vehicles plying in India, Tata Motors is the country’s market leader in commercial vehicles and among the top three in passenger vehicles. It is also the world's fourth largest truck manufacturer and the second largest bus manufacturer. Tata cars, buses and trucks are being marketed in several countries in Europe, Africa, the Middle East, South Asia, South East Asia and South America. (www.tatamotors.com )

Comments

Joe_Limon
March 23, 2009 7:05 PM
This is possibly the greatest green step forward in the automotive industry to date. The average 2 stroke scooter in India produces 10x the emissions, of a north american full sized suv.

cemi
March 23, 2009 7:10 PM
As Clarkson said, looks like a Dr Who monster. Its a good alternative to the scooters etc. I hope it doesn't come to Europe though. And I doubt that Tata has a chance here anyway. Koreans and Japanese have been trying for ages now. Toyota even opened a research facility in Zaventem, Belgium to fix their cars to be more competitive in terms of handling and feel compared to the European designed cars.

Max_Speed
March 23, 2009 7:12 PM
Man this "car" looks funny! Gotta love the rear wheels break cooling air ducks :)

nathandavid88
March 24, 2009 3:59 AM
That duct would actually be to provide air to the rear mounted engine.

911fnatic
March 23, 2009 7:35 PM
Efficient way to quickly use up the world's remaining fuel supply.

Agh, can't even begin to describe my hatred for this thing.


Edited by user on March 23, 2009 at 7:35 PM
nathandavid88
March 24, 2009 4:01 AM
Does this mean you have the right to use cars as a form of transport but these people in India don't?

Mike.F1
March 24, 2009 12:09 PM
@911fnatic: What's it to you? Only you're privileged enough to drive?

"Efficient way to quickly use up the world's remaining fuel supply." ... By the way, I've read this quote before... it's not yours but nice try

Beetle
March 23, 2009 7:51 PM
You just could imagine how you would get out of this car in a bad accident.

Michael
March 23, 2009 8:12 PM
Nano is a good choice for markets like the Indian one. Anyway, it is far better than a scooter. In Europe, it's main competitor could be Chevrolet Spark/Matiz, another "safe" car with an "outstanding" 2.5 stars at EuroNcap tests.


Edited by user on March 23, 2009 at 8:12 PM
BritBoy
March 23, 2009 8:38 PM
It looks unstable to me. If your forced into a sudden turn to avoid something it looks like it could tip over!

Piotre_k
March 23, 2009 8:54 PM
I guess in India this car has a point. But in Europe (in Poland to be precise) it's useless. For one person scooter is enough (and much cheaper). For the family I'd rather buy 15 years old Golf than this. BTW: I've heared that in Poland this would cost about 23 000 zloty. Only 2 or 3 thousand less than a Panda. Please, don't bring Nano here!


Edited by user on March 23, 2009 at 8:56 PM
GRAVE
March 23, 2009 9:06 PM
how many minute does it take to reach 62 mph ..?

madness
March 24, 2009 12:18 AM
haha i dont think it even reaches 60! And if it did, and u were driving it, wud u really want to go that fast in one of those!?!

Bristol411S3
March 23, 2009 9:29 PM
Easy for those of us with relative wealth to diss this car, but it's aimed at the families in India and elsewhere in the poorer parts of Asia where it's common to see four on a motorcycle. It deserves to do well in these markets.

Agreed it doesn't make as much sense at the higher price point in Europe, but that's our problem.

isaacu
March 23, 2009 9:40 PM
Congratulations to Tata and the People of India for the wonderful spirit by which this car has been brought to the market. The cynics said Tata would not achieve the price:quality balance to attract the world, but the car is "a miracle" and a paragon desirability. It will sell in the numbers it deserves and even more! This is an "empathic" automobile.

Wait!.....I already hear the "rustling" of cheque books!!

isaacu

Iconic
March 23, 2009 9:54 PM
As much as I think this car will do well in India, the highways in India are scary as hell. This little sucker wont stand a chance against a lorry. these should be strictly city cars.

motorjedi
March 24, 2009 2:40 AM
Uh, Max_speed, there's no such thing as a cooling duck. A duck is a bird, which makes an annoying quacking noise. In some countries it is cooked as a delicacy. Duck is also a cricket term, implying that a batsman has gotten out without scoring any runs. Those vents are DUCTS. Not to cool the brakes, this isn't a supercar, they are to cool the engine - which is in the back. Geez.

Anyhow, this car isn't actually intended for the chaotic highways of India, though that's not to say it won't be driven there. Yes, the lorries are very frightening, and I assume overtaking will be a problem with a 2-cyl engine. However, this will be a great city car, and is touted to someday replace India's sub-urban, highly unsafe, three-wheeler, doorless rickshaw (which, incidentally, also plies the dangerous highways).

All in all, great car, can't wait to drive one. Will let you know when I do.

http://www.autocarindia.com/new/Information.asp?id=2701

Beetle
March 24, 2009 6:33 PM
Maybe you should read the article above:

"I hope it will provide safe, affordable, four-wheel transportation to families who till now have not been able to own a car. We are delighted in presenting the Tata Nano to India and the world,"

Honest1
March 24, 2009 6:51 PM
Why Do So Many People On Here Hate This Car ????? Can We Just Remind Our self Why This Car Was Bought To Market. It's To Help Those In Less Privileged Parts Of The World Travel In Safer Conditions Than They Are Used Too. Granted It's Not "OUR" First Choice In Buying a Car But At least We Have A Choice.

So Just Be Grateful That You Have A Better Lifestyle Than Those Who Look At This Car As A Real Form Of Transport.

Mizzoutiger
March 24, 2009 8:46 PM
If this car were to come to the US it would not be as cheap as in India. There is the fact that there are no safety features whatsoever and adding them would make the price in the US above $5K for sure. Though it's only competition would be from the Smart Car and it would still be about half the price of those so it would be in good shape. More info about the Nano story here, http://www.newsy.com/videos/world_s_cheapest_car_hits_market/

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