Indian cars fail safety test: global watchdog


New Delhi, Jan 31 (AP): Several of India’s most popular car models, including the famously small Tata Nano, crumpled in independent crash tests in ways that would likely lead to fatality or serious injury, a global car safety watchdog said on Friday.

The results are an indictment of the auto industry in India, which lacks adequate safety standards, said David Ward, head of the London car-safety watchdog Global New Car Assessment Programme (GNCAP), which performed the crash tests. India has some of the deadliest roads in the world.

Drivers should be “educated and protected by regulation, but that’s not happening in India,” said Mr Ward.

India’s growing middle class, anxious to buy new cars, has helped fuel a booming auto industry while demanding little in terms of safety. Last year India produced 3.2 million cars, nearly twice the 1.7 million manufactured in the 2008 fiscal year. For the bulk of those sold within India, air bags and rear passenger seat belts were optional, and none was required to be tested for its ability to withstand a collision.

The lack of safety features, combined with reckless driving and shoddy roads, has helped give India a road death rate that is more than six times as high as that of the United States and nearly three times China’s rate, according to the World Health Organization’s 2013 road safety report on the number of deaths compared with the size of a country’s car fleet.

Seen another way, one in 10 people killed in a road accident worldwide is Indian.
Four of five small cars popular on the Indian market last year including the Tata Nano, the best-selling Maruti Suzuki Alto 800 and the Hyundai i10 failed independent crash tests recently performed by Global NCAP. The findings were not unlike what safety assessors found in Brazil and Mexico last year.

Automakers said the issue of car safety is complex, involving not just passenger safety, but also the safety of those outside the car. They said that means cars need to handle well, with good steering and brake systems while drivers must be educated about the rules of the road, and roads should be in good condition.

These are all challenges in India, where roads are often unpaved and pockmarked by ditches. City streets frequently crumble under heavy traffic, monsoon rains and hot sun. The minimal fines imposed for speeding mean limits are often flouted, with drivers peeling around corners and honking at cows, bullock carts, cyclists or anything else in their way.

Tim Leverton, head of Research and Development for Tata Motors, said Tata is looking again at the Nano’s structure for ways to improve its strength, after already adding power steering and improving the car’s dynamics.

In the Indian tests, only the Volkswagon Polo’s 2014 model had air bags, which were added after the earlier model failed the crash test. Volkswagon said the air bags, as well as anti-lock brakes, would become standard from Feb. 1 along with a 2.7 percent price increase to offset the costs. “We are proud to be leading the cause of driver safety,” Arvind Saxena, the managing director of Volkswagen’s Indian passenger car business, said in a statement.

India’s biggest carmaker, Maruti Suzuki, did not respond to calls for comment. The Polo and the Ford Figo were the only two cars to maintain their structures in a 64-kph collision, while the other three crumpled at a slower speed of 56 kph in ways that would likely lead to fatality or serious injury even with air bags.

All five cars chosen were standard, entry-level models, the sort a working class family might choose as their first car, rather than more expensive versions with additional features.

  

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Comment on this article

  • Clifford, mangalore

    Sat, Feb 01 2014

    Princess Diana was not wearing a seat belt, but her body guard who was on the front seat whose side hit the post was wearing seat belts and still alive even though the impact was on his side. Mercedes spends millions of pounds on crash tests and is one of the safest cars you can drive in the world.

    DisAgree [1] Agree [4] Reply Report Abuse

  • Af, mangalore

    Sat, Feb 01 2014

    Then how princes Diana died in a car crash ? if European cars are so much having the safety standards

    DisAgree [1] Agree [5] Reply Report Abuse

  • Jossey Saldanha, Mapusa

    Sat, Feb 01 2014

    Fuel efficient cars v/s safe cars is a trade off which these dumb will never understand...

    DisAgree [1] Agree [3] Reply Report Abuse

  • Well wisher, Udupi

    Sat, Feb 01 2014

    The highest number of accidents in India is I'm sure Udupi ,kundapur and Mangalore we definitely need to do something about these rash kundapur mangalore express buses.

    DisAgree [1] Agree [5] Reply Report Abuse

  • Roshan Patrao, Mangalore

    Sat, Feb 01 2014

    Do we need more proof that global car companies take Indians for a ride? Given the Indian road conditions and the attitude of Indian road users, Indian vehicles should have more safety features than their counterparts elsewhere in the world, but we are still considered substandard people. Even our government is to be blamed for its inaction in this regard. People abide only when something is enforced on them and adhered to by the concerned officials - not when it is made optional. In every issue, the OVERDRIVE magazine has been publishing Euro NCAP ratings for cars sold in India in its car buyer's guide. I suspected if those ratings applied to cars sold in India. Now my suspicion has been proved.

    DisAgree Agree [4] Reply Report Abuse

  • Cynthia, Moodbidri

    Sat, Feb 01 2014

    Indian cars, Indian roads and Indian drivers totally fail safety test !! Because there is no value of humans here, animals are given more value in the West, than humans in India.

    DisAgree Agree [9] Reply Report Abuse

  • Benny, Anjuna

    Sat, Feb 01 2014

    For the admirers of this so called test by watch dogs, please bear in mind there is day and night difference between our road conditions and road conditions in the west. Speeds of 120 KM is normal in the west and middle east, whereas in Indian roads vehicles have to crawl at 40 or 60 KM. So it hardly makes any difference if you are driving a technological marvel or a poor man's car. Our country will manage itself without the expert comments of nations who have progressed at the sweat , blood and tears of millions of slaves, and want to sell us stuff we do not need.

    DisAgree Agree [4] Reply Report Abuse

  • Tony Fernandes, San Francisco/Udupi

    Sat, Feb 01 2014

    Mr. Ahmad,
    Remember, most of India is rural and the majority of the Indians use a bicycle, public transport or still walk miles together to reach work, school, college, temple church etc., only small
    percentage of Indian people have a driving license. Compared to the number of miles driven on a personal vehicle, number of vehicles per persons & number of licensed drivers, most people who are killed or injured in vehicle accidents are fellow Indians in India.

    DisAgree Agree [3] Reply Report Abuse

  • Ahmed, Mangalore

    Sat, Feb 01 2014

    You are right. For most of the accidents in India, our most corrupt system is the reason right from the issuance of a driver's license.

    DisAgree Agree [4] Reply Report Abuse

  • Ronald D, Udupi

    Sat, Feb 01 2014

    Ivan, where Coopa Mandooookas know about beauty of the world and life other than their blind belief?? Your suggestion will be healthy ....only DP comes out of his well!!

    DisAgree Agree [2] Reply Report Abuse

  • R Mallar, Kasaragod/ Dubai

    Sat, Feb 01 2014

    The testing standard must be questioned. With the potholed Indian roads, you cannot drive over 40kmph and these cars are safe at this speed.

    DisAgree [3] Agree Reply Report Abuse

  • nv , manipal

    Fri, Jan 31 2014

    Good analysis

    DisAgree Agree Reply Report Abuse

  • ad, mangloor

    Fri, Jan 31 2014

    Reckless driving and terrible roads and cheap products dumped in Indian roads. Where is the Indian government to regulate this?

    DisAgree [1] Agree [3] Reply Report Abuse

  • shaikh MOHd Rizwan, karkala

    Fri, Jan 31 2014

    Dear readers,

    All the manufactures of Cars in India knows the taste of Indians.

    The majority Indian consumer needs cheap price and mileage.
    So for the manufacturer four spinning wheels on chassis take them as much distance as possible.

    The Indian consumer mindset and tough Ministry of Surface Transport can change it.

    As of know Billion plus population this number really matters.

    Jai hind

    DisAgree Agree [4] Reply Report Abuse

  • stan, dubai

    Fri, Jan 31 2014

    This test is correct. To save costs, the Indian car manufacturers are mounting the engine not on the proper chassis. I don't think our Nano got proper chassis. I have been driving foreign cars since 35 years. Please note that they will big body also not according to the capacity of the engine. My request you to save same rupees, please don't compromise with the car which is not fit in safety test. It is same like Chinese goods are cheap, but they are good in the long run.

    DisAgree Agree [1] Reply Report Abuse

  • Nanag Shetty, Kinnigoly, Oman

    Fri, Jan 31 2014

    In India more death happens because of reckless driving and uncontrolled issuing of driving licenses ,than vehicle type.
    More deaths happen in train ,bus , truck and bike accidents !!!

    DisAgree Agree [3] Reply Report Abuse

  • Captain, Mangalore

    Fri, Jan 31 2014

    Another example of.... "In India there is NO value for human Life" KUCH BHI CHALTHA HAI attitude.

    DisAgree [1] Agree [2] Reply Report Abuse

  • Ahmed, Mangalore

    Fri, Jan 31 2014

    The report says "one in 10 people killed in a road accident worldwide is Indian"
    They forgot that, one in 7 persons is an Indian in the world today.

    DisAgree [2] Agree [12] Reply Report Abuse

  • Jossey Saldanha, Mapusa

    Fri, Jan 31 2014

    If you want fuel efficiency drive Indian cars and if you want safety drive India's battle tank ARJUN...

    DisAgree [4] Agree [11] Reply Report Abuse

  • stan, qatar

    Fri, Jan 31 2014

    World famous Mercedes-Benz could not save the life of Princess Diana!!!!! Most of the so called safety cars driven in the Gulf and other country's have seen how far they are safe and what is the fate. Good joke.

    DisAgree [12] Agree [8] Reply Report Abuse

  • Edward R. Monteiro, Kulshekar, Mangalore

    Fri, Jan 31 2014

    I agree with you 10000% with Benny and Bryan. Once upon a time till 1980's, we had only Ambassador and Premier cars. The cars made with foreign collaboration,i.e.,Suzuki, Toyota, Chevrolet, Nissan, Hyundai, Mitsubishi, etc..to name a few, entered the Indian markets and thus changed and revolutionized the Auto industry. Except for Chevrolet, most of the collaborators are from Japan. Americans and the British do not want to see India progressing in the Automobile and any other sector and they want to sell their junk heavy cars and other junk goods to us. Let us not fall prey to this JUNK Report of the British. They are zealous. Innovations do need to keep pace with the change in technology.

    With all the bad roads in India, if any driver drives safely and adheres to the manufacturer's instructions and prescribed safety standards, the Indian made cars are safe. Most of the accidents that take place in India are man made and due to ignoring the safety standards and rash driving. Jai Hind.

    DisAgree [8] Agree [17] Reply Report Abuse

  • Rudolf, Mangalore/Mumbai

    Fri, Jan 31 2014

    Even their products manufactured in India are not of the same high standards as manufactured in their parent countries!! Recently a brand new Honda city's brakes and steering wheel jammed at the same time on Bandra Worli Sealink and another incident a new high end Audi spontaneously caught fire!! Also in the Tavera case they fooled the Indian public by giving false data and later had to call back the more than a lac cars. We Indians blindly like to admire anything that comes from these foreign countries (even s#it), it is time to use our heads!! The HM Ambassador was the best car for our country roads, hauling up to 12 passengers from rural areas to cities safely during the olden days, still cannot forget them!!

    DisAgree [5] Agree [16] Reply Report Abuse

  • Bollu, Mangalore

    Fri, Jan 31 2014

    Rudolf...
    What's the reason Ford Vehicles removed all of sudden from International Market. Most of Automobile Industries are belong to Israel..even Ford.

    Western countries are only good to show downward a third world countries..nothing else. No match whatsoever for Mercedes against either American/Japanese cars. Germany is good in technology.

    DisAgree [11] Agree [4] Reply Report Abuse

  • Antony Fernandes, Mangalore / USA

    Fri, Jan 31 2014

    All factors matters in India, Car drivers, Car manufacturers, Police, RTO, Public, Indian roads, etc. etc. Majority of the accidents and safety can be protected only by the driver’s alertness. Since Law is very loose and fines are very law in India this gave freedom to drivers of heavy vehicles (Truck and Buses) to kill the drivers and passengers of cars, motorcycles. Apart from this people will just cross the roads without looking either side in so many cases.

    DisAgree [1] Agree [9] Reply Report Abuse

  • Sachidanand Shetty, Mundkur/Dubai

    Fri, Jan 31 2014

    Whether safety or other tests fail or not, but Indian Central and State Governments never fails in collecting VAT and RTO Taxes. Funny thing is when they add any safety factor or luxury items in base model their VAT and RTO Taxes increases accordingly based on the ex-factory price. Moreover SUV car worth 11 Lakhs Indian Rupees doesn’t even comes with CD player and Air Bag facility too

    DisAgree [3] Agree [16] Reply Report Abuse

  • Ivan, Mangalore/Dubai

    Fri, Jan 31 2014

    Mr.Sachidanand Shetty,
    Mundkur/Dubai,
    Plz come out of politics for a few minutes a day and see the world. There are beautiful things better than politics.

    DisAgree [2] Agree [17] Reply Report Abuse

  • Vincent Rodrigues, Katapadi/Bangalore

    Fri, Jan 31 2014

    Indian cars are designed to earn more money to the manufacturers at the cost of safety to the user.Thanq.

    DisAgree [5] Agree [13] Reply Report Abuse

  • Suleman, Udupi

    Fri, Jan 31 2014

    Cars' safety is designed with respect to speed and road conditions. I believe this may be relevant if we build high speed roads like western/gulf countries.

    DisAgree [2] Agree [12] Reply Report Abuse

  • William, Bantwal

    Fri, Jan 31 2014

    India wants to produce cheaper cars, but not neglecting safety. The car's body must be strong to resist any accident, Safety rods in front and back and also safety tyre like Pajero at backside of all cars. Attaching some steel does not matter while thinking of the safety of many lives. All the best & best of luck for the new productions in future.

    DisAgree [4] Agree [4] Reply Report Abuse

  • RUBIN, dubai

    Fri, Jan 31 2014

    Please think safety first not money
    as we think safety first in Dubai.jaan hai tho jahan hai

    DisAgree [9] Agree [6] Reply Report Abuse

  • Benny, Anjuna

    Fri, Jan 31 2014

    Even if India produces the best of the cars there will always be watchdogs who will do their best to fail them. Of course these watch dogs will be either American or British, all too obvious.

    DisAgree [19] Agree [28] Reply Report Abuse

  • Bryan, Bahrain

    Fri, Jan 31 2014

    Give one Free car under the table for this British Watchdog David Ward, everything will be OK and GOOD TO GO...

    DisAgree [12] Agree [22] Reply Report Abuse

  • R.Bhandarkar, M'lore

    Fri, Jan 31 2014

    Here any Stray Dog can tell you that....

    DisAgree [6] Agree [36] Reply Report Abuse


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