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New
Delhi: Hyundai Motor Co., South Korea''s largest automaker,
said it may produce diesel engines in India for locally
assembled cars.
Hyundai Motor, has US$500mn of investments earmarked until
2008 for raising its share of India''s vehicle market to
25 percent by 2010.
Four
of the seven types of cars and sports-utility vehicles
sold by Hyundai Motor in India are run by diesel engines
imported from South Korea. The 1.1-liter Santro and 1.3-liter
Getz compete with Tata Motors Ltd.''s diesel-engine Indica
hatchback.
Tata
Motors is the nation''s biggest maker of diesel-powered
cars with 80 percent of Indica and Indigo sedans having
diesel engines.
Hyundai
Motor may make diesel engines with 1.1 litre and 1.3 litre
capacities in India, both used on minicars and compact
vehicles, S.S. Yang, the carmaker''s managing director
for India said.
Maruti,
the largest carmaker in India and 54 percent owned by
Japan''s Suzuki Motor Corp., will make 1.3-litre diesel
engines for exports. Half of the engines, made with technology
from Fiat SpA and General Motors Corp.''s Adam Opel AG,
will be exported to Asian and European Union countries,
the carmaker said.
Mumbai-based
Tata Motors last week introduced a turbo- charged version
of its diesel engine in the 1.4-litre Indica hatchback.
Ford Motor
Co., the second-biggest U.S. automaker, has said it will
offer customers a diesel engine when its Fiesta car goes
on sale next month.
Maruti
will start offering diesel engines in its cars from 2007
after its diesel engine factory is completed.
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