| by Paul A. Eisenstein | (2007-04-21) |
Nanjing Auto, a major Chinese domestic automaker, made plenty of headlines when it acquired the remains of the bankrupt British automaker, Rover. But it topped that act, last year, when the company announced plans to produce a new version of Rover's classic-reborn MGF sports car - at a plant in
Since then, there've been a series of conflicting reports suggesting Nanjing/Rover has scuttled the deal. But reports of the death of the American MG have been greatly exaggerated - well, at least maybe, according to MG CEO Zhang Xin.
There's no question that the MG will go back into production in the
As for
During MG's news conference at the Shanghai Motor Show, the automaker unveiled a second product, an updated version of the old Rover 75, now badged MG7 (and quite similar to the Roewe W2 Concept, shown by another Chinese maker, SAIC.) Now in final preparation for launch, later this year, Zhang said the MG7 "and all our (future) cars" will be earmarked for export as well as for sale in the huge and fast-growing Chinese domestic market.
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