This is Alfas big rescue plan

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Big on aims, but frustratingly thin on declarations of detail, Alfa Romeo's CEO Harald Wester today revealed his plan to transform the Italian company. He promises his cars will go face to face with the Germans by 2018. "They will be benchmarked against the best the German industry has to offer," we're told.
The plan means the MiTo will be dropped and not replaced. Also, the planned co-operation car with Mazda based on the next MX-5 will no longer be an Alfa, but re-styled and re-branded a Fiat.
What Alfa will get, late next year, is its long-delayed mid-sized sporting saloon. That's the vital 3-Series rival. A second body-style - swoopy estate, we think - will launch the following year. There will also be a full-size rear-drive saloon - think 5-Series rival - before 2018. Those cars will all share a brand-new RWD/AWD components matrix.
By 2018 we will also see a Giulietta successor, Wester's plan promises. That also comes in two body styles - five-door hatch and, most likely, saloon or coupe. Sources tell us that they'll use the existing FWD architecture.
Crossovers are vital to any aspiring premium company these days, and Alfa will have two by 2018. We understand the smaller of them is a Giulietta relative, while the larger will sit on Alfa's new RWD/AWD underpinnings.
Finally, a 'specialist car'. We think this will be a large rear-drive front-engined Spider.
The new-era Alfas, Wester said, will have five critical characteristics.
First, advanced and innovative engines. Fair enough: the company launched MultiAir, and the 4C's engine is top-notch technically. For the new range of cars, he's talking about over 500bhp at the peak of the range. It goes like this: there will be a small four-cylinder petrol (around 1.4-litre) engine making 110-180bhp, and then a 1.8 four making 170-320bhp. Finally a 2.7-litre six-cylinder derivative of that, capable of 500+bhp. Diesels will be four and six cylinders, making 110-350bhp.
The cars will be light, too. Another of Wester's five tenets is that Alfas will have class-best power-to-weight ratios.
Third, that weight will be distributed front:rear equally. Now this is interesting. Wester doesn't mention that RWD is an absolute requirement, but without it nose-heaviness is almost inevitable. Also, Wester's boss, Fiat-Chrysler CEO Sergio Marchionne, said recently: "One of the issues is Alfa never had to my knowledge a front-drive architecture."
Number four. Wester says the vehicles will embody ‘unique technical solutions'. Marchionne said the firm's suppliers will be involved in this effort, giving their new inventions to Alfa first.
The fifth plank of his strategy is ‘groundbreaking and distinctively Italian design'. Yup, there's enough talent in the company to do this.
In fact, Italy figures strongly in the plan, because again Marchionne himself said, "Alfa Romeos have to be produced in Italy with an Italian powertrain. Some things belong to a place. Alfa belongs to Italy. As Ferrari and Maserati do."
At which point, any reader with a memory will interject that we've had a lot of plans from Alfa bosses before, and the brand has still withered tragically. Wester was speaking at a conference for investment analysts, the people who put money into Fiat Chrysler shares. Marchionne was there as Wester spoke. In that company, Wester said his plan is costed at €5 billion (£4.1 billion) and that the plan is ‘protected and funded by senior leadership'.

Written By:- Paul Horrell

More of this article on the Top gear website
 
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