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The
wind-powered Dagenham Diesel Centre (DDC) is celebrating the successful
launch of a new line to produce low-carbon 1.4 and 1.6-litre Duratorq
TDCi turbo diesel engines – the result of a £130 million investment
programme.
Production of the larger engine is now
underway, with the 1.4-litre unit to be added in June. These high
technology diesel engines power the most fuel efficient versions of the
Ford Fiesta, the Ford Fusion, the Ford Focus and the Ford C-MAX. Within
the wider Ford family, these engines are also used in Volvo and Mazda
models.
This additional production capacity at
Dagenham is needed to satisfy rising demand for the high technology
diesel engines that are part of the ongoing cooperative agreement
between Ford Motor Company and PSA Peugeot Citroën. Around 250 extra
assembly operators to date have been employed at the DDC in readiness
for the start of production.
Total
engine production output on the Ford Dagenham estate will rise to
1,000,000 units a year by 2009 with the addition of these engines. By
then 1.4 and 1.6-litre production capacity will be 575,000. The balance
will be accounted for by the estate's existing 1.8, 2.0, 2.2 and
2.4-litre four-cylinder engine ranges, plus the 2.7-litre V6 diesel
engine for Jaguar, Land Rover and PSA Peugeot Citroën and the 3.6-litre
V8 diesel engine produced for Land Rover.
In a
Ford Fiesta, Dagenham's new 1.6-litre engine produces only 116 grammes
of CO 2 per kilometre. Drivers' shift to diesel cars led to a 24 per
cent rise last year in engine assembly at Dagenham – Ford's global
centre for diesel engineering and manufacture. |