The Star Malaysia - Star2

Bye-bye Beetle

-

VOLKSWAGEN is ending production of its iconic “Beetle” cars next year after adding a pair of final editions of the insect-inspired vehicles.

The curvy-topped two-door, rear-engined economy car, which shook off Nazi origins to become a global auto phenomenon, is being sidelined as Volkswagen emphasises electric cars and larger family-oriented vehicles.

But company officials, still trying to completely turn the page after 2015’s costly “dieselgate” scandal, opened the door to reviving the model at some point, alluding to the company’s 2017 decision to unveil a revamped Volkswagen Bus as a possible template.

“As we move to being a full-line, family-focused automaker in the US and ramp up our electrific­ation strategy ... there are no immediate plans to replace it,” Hinrich Woebcken, chief executive of Volkswagen Group of America said in a statement.

“But, I would also say, never say never,” he added.

“The loss of the Beetle after three generation­s, over nearly seven decades, will evoke a host of emotions from the Beetle’s many devoted fans,” Woebcken said.

Sixties icon

The vehicle’s history goes back to the Nazi era, having first been developed by Ferdinand Porsche with support from Adolf Hitler, who in 1937 formed the state-run Volkswagen­werk, or “The People’s Car Company”. After the war, the Allied countries eventually made Volkswagen a priority in an effort to revive the German auto industry.

The sedans made their US debut in the 1950s, but sales were weak, in part owing to the company’s Nazi origins.

The advertisin­g agency Doyle Dane Bernback in 1959 rechristen­ed the car the “Beetle”, and began touting the vehicle’s small size as an advantage to consumers, according to the History Channel.

The car attained further popularity with the 1968 Disney movie The Love Bug, the story of a racing Volkswagen with a mind of its own.

Andy Warhol did prints featuring the car and a Beetle was also the most prominent car in the background of Abbey Road ,the final Beatles album to be recorded.

US sales ceased in 1979, but the vehicle continued to be produced in Mexico and Brazil, according to Car and Driver. VW revived the “New Beetle” in the United States 1997.

But sales of the Beetle slipped 3.2% to 15,667 in 2017 in the United States, a fraction of the sales for the Jetta and Passat sedans.

At the Detroit Auto Show in January, the German automaker unveiled a revamped version of the Jetta and also touted the Atlas, a new mid-sized SUV.

VW continues to deal with fallout from the “dieselgate” scandal that broke in September 2015.

The company, having already paid out costly government settlement­s, is fighting billions of dollars in additional claims lodged by shareholde­rs who saw their stock plummet in value after authoritie­s cracked down on VW over the installati­on of so-called “defeat devices” into 11 million cars worldwide to fool regulatory emissions tests.

 ?? — AP ?? Volkswagen of America has announced the end of production of the third-generation Beetle next year.
— AP Volkswagen of America has announced the end of production of the third-generation Beetle next year.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia