If ever you wanted an example of just how much and how quickly the car industry is changing, look no further than the Ford Fiesta going out of production.
From being Britain’s best-selling car for as long as anyone can remember to dropping out of the top 10 last year when the chip shortage hit car production to now being axed completely: its demise has been swift.
Ford’s focus is shifting firmly to electrification, and its presence in the B-segment will be taken by the Puma crossover and an electric version of it, due by 2024.
Ford’s strategy isn't to go like for like with models from the old world into the electrified new, instead taking the opportunity to reinvent its range (raiding its back catalogue for some familiar names at the same time), which is why the Fiesta is following the Focus off price lists.
There’s also the subtext that Ford as a business in Europe is known to only really make any profits of substance on vans and on its crossovers; the margins are just too thin on traditional cars, prices of which have crept ever upwards, due to the legislative burden placed on car makers.
It's a sad day. Everyone has a Fiesta story or memory and many of us have owned them. I’ve owned three, including one as our current family transport.
The decision is understandable on a business level – inevitable, even. Yet it does set off further alarm bells for the industry in Europe about its ability to provide new cars that are affordable to the masses; and raise questions about whether the average CO2 emissions of Europe’s car parc can drop at the rate it needs to as people are forced into staying in their current cars or into used ones as they simply can't afford the higher costs of EVs.
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VW and Audi are going also to abandon repectively the Polo and the A1.
There will be a gap between demand and supply by proposing electric SUV rather than these "cheap" cars.
Moreover, it is and will be more and more difficult to find a entry level sports car.
I share the general sentiment expressed by other comments that though it's sad the Fiesta is going, there are still lots of other superminis available and I don't see the supermini dying anytime soon. There will always be demand for small cars - not everyone wants or needs a large car, and plenty just want cheap motoring. Rather than the supermini being under threat, it's actually cheap simple motoring that risks becoming history. Dacia are the only manufacturer that offer some hope but how long until legislation catches up with them...