Ford to end production of Fiesta cars as it increases range of electric vehicles
Ford has announced the end of the UK’s best selling car – the Fiesta.
By the end of June next year, no more Fiestas are to be produced in the manufacturer’s factory in Cologne, Germany.
The Fiesta was the UK’s best-selling car with 4,804,098 sold, according to data from the Society of Motor Manufacturers and Traders.
It outpaced the Ford Escort, the second best-selling car in the UK, by more than one million sales.
The car was consistently in the top five best-selling cars and was the number one between 2009 and 2020.
More than 22 million have been produced globally since 1976 and the model has been sold in more than 50 countries.
Since it was first sold in 1976 the car won numerous awards, including the 1978 British Design Council efficiency award and in 2002 Germany’s prestigious Golden Steering Wheel award.
The withdrawal of the popular vehicle comes as Ford makes changes to its portfolio to make space for more electric cars.
Production of the S-MAX and Galaxy models will also end in Ford’s factory in Valencia, Spain, by next April.
Ford is to only produce electric cars by 2030 and all vehicles it makes are to be electric by 2035.
Three new electric car models and four commercial vehicles will be launched in Europe by 2024, Ford said.
The plans are part of the maker’s aim to sell more than 600,000 electric vehicles in the region by 2026.
The Fiesta holds a unique cultural significance in the UK as it was the first car for many, and a second car for many families, as car ownership rose from the 1990s to early 2000s.
Its launch also coincided with the huge rise in British women driving and commuting as more joined the workforce.