Tata Engineering’s new sedan named Indigo
09 Aug 2002
Mumbai: Tata Engineering has announced that its new offering, a mid-size sedan targeted at the hugely competitive C segment, will be called Indigo. The product is likely to hit the roads by the end of 2002.
According to the company, the car derives its name from the words ‘India’ and ‘Go,’ symbolising a nation on the move, and is aimed at Indians on the go, intending to make a purposeful statement.
Tata Engineering vice-president (sales and marketing - passenger car business unit) Rajiv Dube says the name Indigo invokes a sense of patriotism like Indica, which itself has created a strongest brand value in the country. “While we do not want to lose the brand equity of our first car we also want to convey a sense of progression through our contemporary sedan, and thus the company chose the name Indigo.”
Tata Indigo is designed to be the most spacious and comfortable sedan in its segment with class-leading ride and handling characteristics. Powered by an 85bhp petrol and a 62bhp turbo-diesel engine, the new car will have a large 500 litres of trunk space and 42 litres of fuel tank capacity. In addition the Indigo is likely to be fitted with a 1.4-litre engine as indicated by the company at the Auto Expo 2002.
While the price of the car has not been announced by the company Tata Engineering executive director (passenger car business unit and engineering research centre) V Sumantran indicated at a press briefing that it would be competitively priced. Analysts expect the car to be priced in the Rs 5-6-lakh range, as most cars in the C segment are priced at these levels.
As the current trends show a shift in passenger preference towards the lower end of the market, the company sees a number of top-end consumers shifting to the C segment in the future.
Says Dube: “We do believe that our entry will revive interest in the segment.”
The company has invested Rs 350 crore for its new projects in the passenger car unit. Prototypes of the car are currently undergoing testing at the company’s facilities in Pune and at international test facilities in the UK.
The Indigo will compete in the crowded lower C segment with Hyundai’s Accent, Ford Ikon, Fiat Siena, Opel Corsa and the Maruti Esteem. The C segment currently accounts for sales of around 3,000 units per month, with the Accent leading the race, followed closely by the Esteem and the Ikon.
In the months to come the battle for the mid-size segment is expected to intensify with Maruti launching a diesel-power version of the Esteem, while at the same effecting improvements on its present petrol offering. Hyundai is also getting ready to come out with an estate version of the Accent towards the yearend.
Telco is also planning to follow up the Indigo’s launch with the Indica Sport, a sportier version of the car, by the end of 2002. The estate version of the Indica will subsequently be rolled out early next year. Sumantran says the company expects to produce around 1,000 Indigos a month, in addition to 6,500 units of the Indica.
Dube says the Indigo will be an extension of the Indica line with the value proposition of “more car per car,” the Indica’s baseline. The Indigo will be sold through the existing Indica dealerships that are at present being beefed up to handle the sedan’s clientele.
Auto analysts expect the diesel version of the car to sell more than the petrol version initially, as Telco is yet to make headway in the petrol segment of passenger cars.
Sumantran says his company is also looking at significant Indigo export volumes. So far, Telco has exported limited volumes of the Indica to Italy, Malta and Bangladesh. It is expecting a surge in export volumes in future, once the Euro-III petrol version is ready.
Tata Engineering, which sold about 89,000 passenger cars (including utility vehicles like the Sumo and the Safari) last year, hopes to exceed 1,00,000 units this fiscal, including the Indigo.
Latest articles
Featured articles
The deregulation “holy grail”: Trump EPA dismantles the legal bedrock of climate policy
By Cygnus | 13 Feb 2026
The Trump EPA moves to rescind the 2009 Endangerment Finding, reshaping federal climate authority and business risk.
Tokenising the gilt: what the UK’s digital bond pilot could mean for sovereign debt
By Cygnus | 12 Feb 2026
HM Treasury selects HSBC Orion and Ashurst LLP for its Digital Gilt Instrument (DIGIT) pilot. A deep dive into the architecture, legal framework, and the shift toward near real-time settlement.
The silicon-rich AI race: how Cisco’s G300 puts networking at the center of compute
By Cygnus | 11 Feb 2026
Cisco's new Silicon One G300 targets AI data center bottlenecks as networking becomes central to compute performance.
Server CPU Shortages Grip China as AI Boom Strains Intel and AMD Supply Chains
By Cygnus | 06 Feb 2026
Intel and AMD server CPU shortages are hitting China as AI data center demand surges, pushing lead times to six months and driving prices higher.
Budget 2026-27 Seeks Fiscal Balance Amid Rupee Volatility and Industrial Stagnation
By Cygnus | 02 Feb 2026
India's Budget 2026-27 targets fiscal discipline with record capex as markets tumble, the rupee weakens and manufacturing struggles to regain momentum.
The Thirsty Cloud: Why 2026 Is the Year AI Bottlenecks Shift From Chips to Water
By Axel Miller | 28 Jan 2026
As AI server density surges in 2026, data centers face a new bottleneck deeper than chips — the massive water demand required for cooling next-generation infrastructure.
The New Airspace Economy: How Geopolitics Is Rewriting Aviation Costs in 2026
By Axel Miller | 22 Jan 2026
Airspace bans, sanctions and corridor risk are forcing airlines into costly detours in 2026, raising fuel burn, reducing aircraft utilisation and pushing airfares higher worldwide.
India’s Data Center Arms Race: The Battle for Power, Cooling, and AI Real Estate
By Cygnus | 22 Jan 2026
India’s data centre boom is turning into an AI arms race where power contracts, liquid cooling and fast commissioning decide the winners across Mumbai, Chennai and Hyderabad.
India’s Oil Balancing Act: Refiners Rebuild Middle East Supply Lines as Russia Flows Disrupt
By Axel Miller | 21 Jan 2026
India’s refiners are rebalancing crude sourcing as Russian imports fell to a two-year low in December 2025, lifting OPEC’s share and raising geopolitical risk concerns.

