Skip to main content

Tata Technologies forms new vehicle development group

Tata Technologies is forming a new vehicle programme group, the Tata Technologies' Vehicle Programs & Development (VPD) Group, to meet the demand for faster, more complex vehicle development support within the auto industry. It will include more than 200 engineers operating from four automotive engineering centres of excellence worldwide - Detroit (US) Coventry (UK), Pune (India) and Stuttgart (Germany).
May 21, 2012 Read time: 2 mins
5641 Tata Technologies is forming a new vehicle programme group, the Tata Technologies' Vehicle Programs & Development (VPD) Group, to meet the demand for faster, more complex vehicle development support within the auto industry. It will include more than 200 engineers operating from four automotive engineering centres of excellence worldwide – Detroit (US) Coventry (UK), Pune (India) and Stuttgart (Germany).

Kevin Fisher, a senior Tata Technologies executive with more than 30 years of experience in vehicle programme engineering, has been named president of the new organisation and will be based in the Detroit suburb of Novi. "The next decade will see an ever increasing demand for accelerated product development that also will need to incorporate more new technology than the auto industry has seen in 30 years," Fisher commented. "We are positioning the Tata Technologies VPD Group to set the pace in automotive product development and technological innovation."

Fisher reported that the new group has already won several full-vehicle programmes in the United States and Europe, including development of the G2 electric car from Maryland-based Genovation. European-based premium car manufacturers, North American OEMs, major automotive suppliers and independent automotive start-ups are also part of the Tata Technologies VDP Group client portfolio.

Tata Technologies is part of the Tata group, India's oldest and most respected business group, with extensive international operations and fiscal-year revenues of more than $65 billion, 61 per cent of which comes from business outside of India.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • The future of ITS post recession
    January 25, 2012
    ACS, A Xerox Company's Cees de Wijs talks about post-recession recovery and what we might expect to see in the coming years
  • New research predicts growth of autonomous parking technology
    March 9, 2016
    New research by ABI Research forecasts that shipments of new cars featuring autonomous parking technologies to grow at 35 per cent CAGR between 2016 and 2026 and for revenues to likewise show growth at 29.5 per cent CAGR. ABI Research identifies three phases of autonomous parking, with each successive stage set to gradually displace the former and all three coexisting to some degree over the next decade. Ultimately, technology will reach a point in which the car parks itself entirely, with no driver assi
  • Qatar invests $70 billion to pave the way to world beating transportation
    July 26, 2013
    Eng. Zeina Nazer looks at what Qatar’s recently-announced investment in transport infrastructure will mean on the ground. Qatar is experiencing a rapid economic and industrial growth. This growth is characterised by a rapid population increase and by the urgent need towards the development of both infrastructure projects and major transport projects. In order to handle this rate of development within Qatar, Public Works Authority (Ashghal) is developing a fully-integrated multimodal transportation system in
  • Travel information is heading towards smartphones
    January 30, 2012
    Travel information services are undergoing a step change as rapid increase in sales of smartphones brings ITS technology to consumers' fingertips. A virtuous circle of expanding capability is under way in traffic and travel information services, promising much for drivers and reduction of road congestion. A recent rapid rise in sales of smartphones has boosted numbers of vehicles carrying GPS enabled devices and so brought expansion of traffic data available for analysis and dissemination. Greater numbers o