Kia Tasman ute launches in NZ
Stepping into the already crowded ute market, it’s important to bring your best game. Kia look to have done just that with the arrival of its first ute, the Tasman, at a recent event in Wellington.
THE UPDATED Kia Sportage is reported by the New Zealand distributor to have topped its class in a survey on owner satisfaction by influential JD Power automotive consultants, Germany.
Kia Motors has itself risen five places in the manufacturers’ standings.
European drivers, especially Germans, are said to be hard to please and to favour their own manufacturers’ vehicles, so these results matter, says Kia.
In the compact SUV category, the Kia Sportage was ranked first in the JD Power 2014 Germany vehicle ownership satisfaction study,.
The report, which looks at overall driver satisfaction, also lists other Kia models. Kia entered the top-10 list for the first time.
About 18,000 German drivers were asked to rate their satisfaction with their cars – on quality, reliability, attractiveness and running costs.
The Sportage scored 83.6% driver satisfaction and sixth most satisfying car overall.
Kia Motors rose to 10th place, five places up from last year, and up from 17th position in 2012.
“The New Zealand market is closely aligned with the tastes of consumers in Europe, in particular Germany and the UK, so this result carries a lot of weight with us,” says Todd McDonald, general manager of Kia Motors New Zealand.
The Kia Sportage, is Kia’s best selling model in Europe. It was launched in 1993 and is now in its third generation. New Zealand and Europe models are made in Slovakia. The 2014 Sportage now has a 2L direct injection petrol engine, or may be bought with a 2L diesel engine.
European dairy giant Arla Foods celebrated its 25th anniversary as a cross-border, farmer-owned co-operative with a solid half-year result.
The sale of Fonterra’s global consumer and related businesses is expected to be completed within two months.
Fonterra is boosting its butter production capacity to meet growing demand.
For the most part, dairy farmers in the Waikato, Bay of Plenty, Tairawhiti and the Manawatu appear to have not been too badly affected by recent storms across the upper North Island.
South Island dairy production is up on last year despite an unusually wet, dull and stormy summer, says DairyNZ lower South Island regional manager Jared Stockman.
Following a side-by-side rolling into a gully, Safer Farms has issued a new Safety Alert.