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Škoda Auto

Škoda Auto a.s. (Czech pronunciation: [ˈʃkoda] ), often shortened to Škoda, is a Czech automobile manufacturer established in 1925 as the successor to Laurin & Klement and headquartered in Mladá Boleslav, Czech Republic. Škoda Works became state owned in 1948. After 1991, it was gradually privatized to the German Volkswagen Group, becoming a partial subsidiary in 1994 and a wholly owned ordinary 2000.[4][5]

Škoda Auto a.s.
Logo since 2023[1]
Company typeSubsidiary
IndustryAutomotive
PredecessorLaurin & Klement
Founded1925; 99 years ago (1925)
FounderVáclav Laurin and Václav Klement
Headquarters,
Area served
Worldwide (except Japan and North America)
Key people
  • Klaus Zellmer (Chairman of the Board of Management)
  • Alain Favey (Member of the Board of Management)
  • Karsten Schnake (Member of the Board of Management)
ProductsAutomobiles
Electric vehicles
Production output
c. 802,000 units (2021)[2][3]
Revenue €17.7 billion (2021)[3]
(CZK 422.6 billion)[2]
€1.08 billion (2021)[2][3]
(CZK 26.21 billion)[2]
CZK 22.41 billion (2021)[2]
Total assets CZK 231.46 billion (2021)[2]
Total equity CZK 101.52 billion (2021)[2]
Number of employees
36,032 (2021)[2]
ParentVolkswagen Group
DivisionsŠkoda Motorsport
SubsidiariesŠkoda Auto Česká republika
Škoda Auto Deutschland GmbH
Škoda Auto Slovensko s.r.o.
Škoda Auto Volkswagen India
Websiteskoda-auto.com
Footnotes / references
[2][3]

Škoda automobiles are sold in over 100 countries, and in 2018, total global sales reached 1.25 million units, an increase of 4.4% from the previous year.[6] The operating profit was €1.6 billion in 2017, an increase of 34.6% over the previous year.[7][8] As of 2017, Škoda's profit margin was the second-highest of all Volkswagen AG brands after Porsche.[9]

History edit

The Škoda Works was established as an arms manufacturer in 1859. It was one of the largest European industrial conglomerates of the 20th century, founded by Czech engineer Emil Škoda in 1859 in Plzeň, then in the Kingdom of Bohemia, Austrian Empire. It is the predecessor of today's Škoda Auto, Doosan Škoda Power and Škoda Transportation companies.

Laurin & Klement edit

 
Founders Václav Klement (left) and Václav Laurin (1895)
 
Laurin & Klement Type A (1905)

As with many long-established car manufacturers, the company that became Škoda Auto started in the early 1890s by manufacturing bicycles.[10] Škoda (then Laurin & Klement) factories were founded in 1896 as a velocipede manufacturer.[11]

In 1894 (130 years ago) (1894), 26-year-old Václav Klement (1868–1938), who was a bookseller in Mladá Boleslav, Kingdom of Bohemia (today's Czech Republic, then part of Austria-Hungary), was unable to obtain spare parts to repair his German bicycle. Klement returned his bicycle to the manufacturers, Seidel and Naumann, with a letter, in Czech, asking them to carry out repairs, only to receive a reply, in German, stating: "If you want us to answer you, we insist that you convey your message in a language we understand."[12] Not satisfied with the reply and realising the business potential, Klement, despite having no technical experience, decided to start a bicycle repair shop, which Václav Laurin and he opened in 1896 in Mladá Boleslav. Before going into partnership with Klement, Laurin was an established bicycle manufacturer in the nearby town of Turnov.[13]

In 1898, after moving to their newly built factory, the pair bought a Werner "Motocyclette".[nb 1] Laurin & Klement's first motorcyclette, powered by an engine mounted on the handlebars driving the front wheels, proved dangerous and unreliable – an early accident on it cost Laurin a front tooth. To design a safer machine with its structure around the engine, the pair wrote to German ignition specialist Robert Bosch for advice on a different electromagnetic system.[citation needed]

Their new Slavia motorcycle made its debut in 1899, and the company became the first motorcycle factory in Central Europe.[11] In 1900, with a company workforce of 32, Slavia exports began and 150 machines were shipped to London for the Hewtson firm. Shortly afterwards, the press credited them as makers of the first motorcycle.[14][15]

By 1905, the firm was manufacturing automobiles, making it the second-oldest car manufacturer in the Czech lands after Tatra. The company, with an area of 7,800 square metres (0.78 ha), had a workforce of 320 and used 170 special machine tools, power-driven by 100 horsepower (75 kW) of steam power.[11] The first model, Voiturette A, was a success, and the company was established both within Austria-Hungary and internationally.[16]

Škoda edit

 
Škoda 422 (1929)

After World War I, the Laurin & Klement company began producing trucks, but in 1924, after running into problems and being affected by a fire on their premises, the company sought a new partner.

Meanwhile, Akciová společnost, dříve Škodovy závody (Limited Company, formerly the Škoda Works), an arms manufacturer and multisector concern in Plzeň, which had become one of the largest industrial enterprises in Europe and the largest in Czechoslovakia, sought to enlarge its nonarms-manufacturing base, so acquired Laurin & Klement in 1925. It also started manufacturing cars in cooperation with Hispano-Suiza. Most of the later production took place under Škoda's name.

 
Engineer and industrialist Emil Škoda
 
Škoda logo in 1930s

An assembly line was used for production from 1930 onwards. In the same year, a formal spin-off of the car manufacture into a new company, Akciová společnost pro automobilový průmysl or abbreviated ASAP, took place. ASAP remained a wholly owned subsidiary of the Škoda Works, and continued to sell cars under the Škoda marque. Apart from the factory in Mladá Boleslav, it included also the firm's representation, sales offices, and services, as well as a central workshop in Prague. At the time, the car factory in Mladá Boleslav covered an area of 215,000 m2 and employed 3,750 blue-collar and 500 white-collar workers.

 
Škoda Š 932 prototype, 1932

In 1932 ASAP-Škoda in Mladá Boleslav Bohemia produced a type Škoda 932 prototype of a streamlined 4-seater two-door car with a rear air-cooled flat-four engine designed by Karel Hrdlička and Vsevold Korolkov. This car's bodywork closely resembled the small car designs yet to come.[17]

After a decline caused by the economic depression, Škoda introduced a new line of cars in the 1930s, which significantly differed from its previous products. A new design of chassis with backbone tube and all-around independent suspension was developed under the leadership of chief engineer Vladimír Matouš and modelled on the one first introduced by Hans Ledwinka in Tatra. First used on model Škoda 420 Standard in 1933, it aimed at solving insufficient torsional stiffness of the ladder frame.[18]

The new design of chassis became the basis for models Popular (845–1,089 cc), Rapid (1,165–1,766 cc), Favorit (1,802–2,091 cc), and Superb (2,492–3,991 cc).[18] While in 1933 Škoda had a 14% share of the Czechoslovak car market and occupied third place behind Praga and Tatra, the new line made it a market leader by 1936, with a 39% share in 1938.[18]

World War II edit

During the occupation of Czechoslovakia in World War II, the Škoda Works were turned into part of the Reichswerke Hermann Göring serving the Nazi German war effort by producing components for military terrain vehicles, military planes, other weapons components and cartridge cases. Vehicle output decreased from 7,052 in 1939 to 683 in 1944, of which only 35 were passenger cars. Between January and May 1945, 316 trucks were produced.[19] The UK and US air forces bombed the Škoda works repeatedly between 1940 and 1945. The final massive air raid took place on 25 April 1945, and resulted in the almost complete destruction of the Škoda armament works and about 1,000 dead or injured.[20]

Post World War II edit

 
Škoda 1101 Tudor Roadster (1949)

When, by July 1945, the Mladá Boleslav factory had been reconstructed, production of Škoda's first post-World War II car, the 1101 series, began. It was essentially an updated version of the pre-World War II Škoda Popular. In the autumn of 1948, Škoda (along with all other large manufacturers) became part of the communist planned economy, which meant it was separated from the parent company, Škoda Works. In spite of unfavourable political conditions and losing contact with technical development in noncommunist countries, Škoda retained a good reputation until the 1960s, producing models such as the Škoda 440 Spartak, 445 Octavia, Felicia, and Škoda 1000 MB.[21]

 
Škoda Octavia Super (1960)

In late 1959, the Škoda Felicia, a compact four-cylinder convertible coupe, was imported into the United States for model year 1960. Its retail price was around US$2,700, for which one could purchase a V8 domestic car that was larger, more comfortable, and had more luxury and convenience features (gasoline retailed for less than 30 cents per US gallon, so fuel economy was not of primary importance in the United States at that time). Those Felicias that made it to American ownership soon had a number of reliability problems, further damaging the car's reputation. The Felicia was, therefore, a poor seller in the U.S., and leftover cars ended up being hied off at a fraction of the original retail list. Since that time, Škoda automobiles have not been imported into the U.S. for retail sale.[citation needed]

 
Škoda MB 1000 (1966)

In the late 1980s, Škoda (then named Automobilové závody, národní podnik or abbreviated AZNP) was still manufacturing cars that conceptually dated back to the 1960s, and in Western Europe at least - were aimed squarely at the budget end of the market. Rear-engined models such as the Škoda 105/120 (Estelle) and Rapid sold steadily and performed well against more modern makes in races such as the RAC Rally in the 1970s and 1980s. They won their class in the RAC rally for 17 years running. They were powered by a 130 brake horsepower (97 kW), 1,289 cubic centimetres (78.7 cu in) engine. In spite of its dated image and becoming the subject of negative jokes – What do you call a Škoda with a sunroof? A skip! – Škodas remained a common sight on the roads of the United Kingdom and Western Europe throughout the 1970s and 1980s.[22]

Sport versions of the Estelle and earlier models were produced, using the name "Rapid". Soft-top versions were also available. The Rapid was once described as the "poor man's Porsche",[23] and had significant sales success in the UK during the 1980s.[22]

To drivers in the UK, the vehicles which chugged off Škoda's production line in Pilsen, Czechoslovakia, embodied all that was wrong with the planned economies of the Soviet satellite states. Of course, that the Škoda became such a figure of fun was in part due to its ubiquity on Britain's roads. The company must have been doing something right.

— BBC report on Škoda sales in the 1980s.[22]
 
Škoda Favorit (1987–1995)

In 1987, the Favorit was introduced, and was one of a trio of compact front-wheel drive hatchbacks from the three main Eastern Bloc manufacturers around that time, the others being VAZ's Lada Samara and Zastava's Yugo Sana. The Favorit's appearance was the work of Italian design company Bertone. With some motor technology licensed from western Europe, but still using the Škoda-designed 1289 cc engine, Škoda engineers designed a car comparable to western production. The technological gap still existed, but began closing rapidly. The Favorit was very popular in Czechoslovakia and other Eastern Bloc countries. It also sold well in Western Europe, especially in the UK and Denmark due to its low price, and was regarded as solid and reliable. However, it was perceived as having poor value compared with contemporary Western European designs. The Favorit's trim levels were improved, and it continued to be sold until the introduction of the Felicia in 1994.

Volkswagen Group subsidiary edit

 
The Škoda Felicia from 1994 was the first new model after takeover by Volkswagen Group.

Until 1990, Škoda was still making its outdated range of rear-engined small family cars, although it had started production of the Favorit front-wheel drive hatchback in 1987 as an eventual replacement.

The fall of communism with the Velvet Revolution brought great changes to Czechoslovakia, and most industries were subject to privatization. In the case of Škoda Automobile, the state authorities brought in a strong foreign partner. The tender for privatization was announced in 1990; 24 different companies were registered for the tender, while only eight of them expressed a serious interest – BMW, GM, Renault, Volvo, Volkswagen, Ford, Fiat, and Mercedes-Benz. In August 1990, VW and Renault were on the shortlist.[5]

Renault first offered to terminate Favorit production and replace it with the outdated Renault 18 derivative and new Renault Twingo, which would have eliminated the Škoda brand. This offer was declined and Renault prepared a new one. They offered a 60:40 joint venture (40% share of Renault), while Škoda Favorit production was to be retained and produced side by side with the Renault 19, and producing engine units, gearboxes, and other components for Renault. Total investment would have been US$2.6 billion (US$6 billion in 2019).[5]

Volkswagen offered to continue Favorit production and preserve the Škoda brand, including retention of research and development. Volkswagen offered a purchase of 30% Škoda share, gradually increasing to 70%. Volkswagen's total investment would have been US$6.6 billion (US$15 billion in 2019) by 2000. The government inclined on the Renault side, while the Škoda trade union preferred VW, because it offered significantly larger potential for development of the company.[5]

Volkswagen was chosen by the Czech government on 9 December 1990,[24] and as a result, on 28 March 1991 a joint-venture partnership agreement with Volkswagen took place, marked by the transfer of a 30% share to the Volkswagen Group on 16 April 1991, raised later on 19 December 1994 to 60.3% and the year after, on 11 December 1995, to 70% of its shares, with the aim of making VW the largest and controlling shareholder of Škoda.[25] On 30 May 2000, Volkswagen AG bought the remaining 30% of the company, thus making Škoda Auto a wholly owned subsidiary of the group.

Backed by Volkswagen Group expertise and investments, the design – both style and engineering – has improved greatly. The 1994 model Felicia was effectively a reskin of the Favorit, but quality and equipment improvements helped, and in the Czech Republic, the car was perceived as good value for money and became popular. Sales improved across Europe,[5] including the United Kingdom, where the Felicia was one of the best-ranking cars in customer satisfaction surveys.

 
The Octavia is the bestselling Škoda.

Volkswagen AG chairman Ferdinand Piëch personally chose Dirk van Braeckel as head of design, and the subsequent Octavia and Fabia models made their way to the demanding European Union markets. They are built on common Volkswagen Group floorpans. The Fabia, launched at the end of 1999, formed the basis for later versions of the Volkswagen Polo and SEAT Ibiza, while the Octavia, launched in 1996, has shared its floorpan with a host of cars, the most popular of which is the Volkswagen Golf Mk4.

The perception of Škoda in Western Europe has completely changed since the takeover by VW,[26] in stark comparison with the reputation of the cars throughout the 1980s described by some as "the laughing stock" of the automotive world.[27][28] As technical development progressed and attractive new models were marketed, Škoda's image was initially slow to improve. In the UK, a major change was achieved with the ironic "It is a Škoda, honest" campaign, which began in 2000 when the Fabia launched. In a 2003 advertisement on British television, a new employee on the production line is fitting Škoda badges on the car bonnets. When some attractive-looking cars come along, he stands back, not fitting the badge, since they look so good they "cannot be Škodas".[29] This market campaign worked by confronting Škoda's image problem head-on – a tactic which marketing professionals regarded as high risk. By 2005, Škoda was selling over 30,000 cars a year in the UK, a market share over 1%. For the first time in its UK history, a waiting list developed for deliveries from Škoda. UK owners have consistently ranked the brand at or near the top of customer-satisfaction surveys since the late 1990s.

In 1991, Škoda built 172,000 units, exporting 26% of its production to 30 countries, while in 2000, it built 435,000 units, exporting 82% of its production to 72 countries.[30]

Growth strategy edit

 
Škoda Auto plant in Mladá Boleslav

One of the most important years for Škoda Auto was 2010, in terms of both products and management. On 1 September 2010, Prof. Dr. H.C. Winfried Vahland assumed responsibility for the management of the company, becoming the CEO of Škoda Auto. In the same year, Škoda set forth plans to double the company's annual sales to at least 1.5 million by 2018 (later known as the 'Growth Strategy', Czech: Růstová strategie).[31]

At the 2010 Paris Motor Show in September 2010, the company unveiled the Octavia Green E Line. This e-car concept was the forerunner to the e-car test fleet that Škoda released in 2012. The final first-generation Octavia (Tour) was produced at the Mladá Boleslav plant in November 2010. The worldwide production of this model exceeded 1.4 million units since its release in 1996. In 2010 for the first time in history, China overtook German sales to become Škoda's largest individual market.[32]

In 2011, Škoda Auto celebrated its 20-year partnership with the Volkswagen Group. More than 75,000 visitors attended an open-house event held in Mladá Boleslav in the April. Earlier that year, the company provided details on its 2018 Growth Strategy: for at least one new or completely revised model to be released every six months.[33][34] With this in mind, the company redesigned its logo and CI, which was presented at the 2011 Geneva Motor Show. Škoda's main attraction at the event was the VisionD design concept, a forerunner to the future third-generation Octavia. Škoda presented the MissionL design study at the IAA in Frankfurt am Main in September, which was to become the basis of the company's forthcoming compact model the European Rapid.

 
Škoda Auto is one of the largest car manufacturers in Central Europe. In 2014, 1,037,200 cars were sold worldwide, a record for the company.

In the same year, the company started production of the new Rapid model in Pune, India (October 2011), and launched the Škoda Citigo at Volkswagen's Bratislava plant (November 2011).

In 2012, Škoda introduced two new mass production models. The European version of the Rapid premiered at the Paris Motor Show. This car was a successor to the first-generation Octavia in terms of its price bracket. The second model was the third-generation Octavia, which premiered in December 2012. In the same month, local production of the Yeti was launched at the Nizhny Novgorod GAZ factory.[35]

In 2012, Škoda, introduced an emission-free (on the street) fleet of Octavia Green E Line e-cars on Czech roads to be used by external partners. Since internal tests on the fleet in late 2011, the e-fleet had driven more than 250,000 km. During the same year, Škoda celebrated several milestones, including 14 million Škoda cars being produced since 1905 (January),[36] three million Fabias (May),[37] 500,000 Superbs at the Kvasiny plant (June),[38] and 5 years of Škoda operations in China.[35]

Massive rejuvenation of the model range was a major tune for 2013 at Škoda: The Czech car maker launched the third-generation Octavia Combi and Octavia RS (both liftback and estate), as well as facelifted Superb and Superb Combi. They were accompanied by brand new members of the Rapid family as the Rapid Spaceback, the first Škoda hatchback car in the compact segment, and the Chinese version of the Rapid. The Yeti also faced significant changes. With the facelift, two design variants of Škoda's compact SUV are now available, the city-likeoriented Yeti and rugged Yeti Outdoor. Chinese customers were also given a Yeti with an extended wheelbase.

 
Part of the board of directors at the Geneva Motor Show with Škoda Vision X (2018): from left Christian Strube, Klaus-Dieter Schürmann, Alain Favey, Bernhard Maier, Michael Oeljeklaus and Dieter Seemann

In 2015, Volkswagen admitted that it had installed pollution-cheating software in many of its cars to fool regulators that its cars met emissions standards, when in fact they polluted at much higher levels than government standards. About 1.2 million Škoda cars worldwide were fitted with this emissions-cheating device.[39] Škoda stated that Volkswagen would recall and cover refitting costs for all of the cars affected by the scandal.

In 2015, Škoda was voted the most reliable car brand in the UK.[40] A corporate strategy was launched in 2015 to produce a range of all-electric cars from 2019.[41]

Škoda Auto started to manufacture the large, seven-seat SUV Škoda Kodiaq in 2016,[42] it was introduced at the Paris Motor Show in October 2016,[43] and sales began at early 2017. In the second half of 2017, sales began of the new compact SUV Škoda Karoq, which officially replaced the Škoda Yeti. The automaker introduced in December 2018 a new small family car, the Škoda Scala. In February 2019, the company introduced in Geneva the new subcompact crossover Škoda Kamiq.

Electrification strategy edit

 
The fully electric Škoda Enyaq iV has been produced since November 2020, and six fully electric models are to be available by 2025.

In 2015, new Škoda chairman Bernhard Maier stated that the Volkswagen Group "is working on a modular, new electric platform and we are in the team", and "there is no alternative to electrification."[41] New Škoda corporate "Strategy 2025", which replaces the previous "Strategy 2018", aims to start production of a fully electric vehicle in 2020,[41] and five electric models across different segments by 2025.[44]

In 2017,Auto Shanghai, Škoda displayed its Vision E concept for an all-electric 300-bhp coupé-SUV,[45] with level 3 autonomy capability and 500 kilometres (310 mi) range.[46] It is based on the VW MEB platform and Škoda Auto will also manufacture electric-vehicle batteries for the Volkswagen Group in its facility in the Czech Republic.[47] The second development stage, the Škoda Vision iV, was revealed in March 2019.

A plug-in hybrid car, the Škoda Superb iV, was available for sale from early 2020,[48] and a small SUV model Škoda Kamiq with a natural gas-electric hybrid powertrain and a hybrid Fabia from later the same year.[41][49][50] By March 2018, the electrification plan was expanded to 10 electrified models for 2025 - six fully electric cars and four plugin-hybrids. Out of these, five models are to be available by 2020.[51] In 2018, the brand launched its largest-ever investment plan of €2 billion over five years into its electrification.[52]

The brand's first fully electric car, a city car Škoda Citigo-e iV, was sold from 2019 to 2020.[53][54] The all-electric Škoda Enyaq iV is available for sale since September 2020. Škoda Enyaq Coupé is sold from May 2023.

Sales and markets edit

Škoda has maintained sound financial stability over recent years. In 2013, the brand achieved sales revenues totalling €10.3 billion (2012: €10.4 billion). Due to the weak economic situation in many European countries and the expansion of the model range, operating profit reached a modest €522 million (2012: €712 million). Škoda achieved a successful start to 2014. As well as recording the highest number of deliveries to customers in a first quarter ever (247,200; up 12.1%), it recorded a significant increase in sales revenue (23.7%) to almost €3 billion. Operating profit increased 65.2% to €185 million over the previous year.

Sales figures edit

1994[55] 1995[56] 1996[57] 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012[58] 2013[59] 2014 2015[7] 2016[60] 2017 2018[6] 2019[61] 2020[61] 2021[62] 2022[63]
172,000 210,000 261,000 288,458 261,127 241,256 148,500 44,963 - - -
47,876 102,373 143,251 158,503 164,134 164,017 165,635 181,683 233,322 270,274 309,951 344,857 317,335 349,746 387,200 409,360 359,600 389,300 432,300 436,300 418,800 388,200 363,722 257,364 200,771 141,112
823 128,872 250,978 264,641 260,988 247,600 236,698 243,982 232,890 246,561 264,173 229,045 266,800 255,025 202,000 160,500 192,400 202,800 206,500 190,900 172,793 105,459 99,104 92,663
177 16,867 23,135 22,392 22,091 20,989 20,530 25,645 44,548 98,873 116,700 106,847 94,400 91,100 80,200 139,100 150,900 138,100 104,755 86,151 66,146 60,840
14,422 66,661 57,467 47,152 32,332 36,000 39,249 33,300 29,600 16,600 - - -
11,018 52,604 70,300 90,952 82,400 102,900 99,500 95,600 69,500 13,100 10 2 - -
1,700 9,292 103,800 221,400 194,300 212,800 211,500 191,500 142,118 79,702 63,657 17,296
509 36,687 45,200 42,500 40,200 40,700 37,100 39,200 31,199 14,971 4,373 3
100,000 149,200 171,794 131,590 98,566 94,455
6,300 115,700 152,708 137,223 119,156 87,716
27,900 64,597 128,539 120,742 96,269
39,071 63,181 48,154 39,538
634 44,718 53,678
12,815 26,761
- 20,931
172,000 210,000 261,000 336,334 363,500 385,330 435,403 460,252 445,525 449,758 451,675 492,111 549,667 630,032 674,530 684,226 762,600 879,200 949,412 920,800 1,037,200 1,055,500 1,127,700 1,200,500 1,253,700 1,242,816 1,004,816 878,202 731,262

Markets edit

 
Worldwide sales of Škoda cars

As of August 2016, Škoda was being sold in 102 countries.[64] In 2022, the top markets for Škoda by number of sales were Germany (134,260), Czech Republic (71,152), India (51,865), Great Britain (49,555) and Poland (44,985).[63] In the Asia-Pacific region, Škoda is also being sold in Australia, New Zealand, Taiwan and Brunei. Škoda is also planning to expand into Iran, where imports are to be started from 2018 and production of vehicles by 2020.[65] Expansion strategy also includes Singapore.[66]

Production edit

Škoda cars are now made in factories in the Czech Republic (635,213 cars), India (55,750 cars), China (41,936 cars), Slovakia (16,116 cars), and Russia (15,979 cars).[63] A smaller number of Škoda models are additionally manufactured in Solomonovo, Ukraine through local partner. Till 2020 also there was manufacturing in Öskemen, Kazakhstan.[67] The following table lists the factories and their production models in 2019.[68][69]

Manufacturing plant Production models Location Operator[70]
Mladá Boleslav (Czech Republic) Fabia, Octavia, Kamiq, Karoq, Scala, Enyaq iV, EA211 engines 50°25′16″N 14°55′50″E / 50.421111°N 14.930556°E / 50.421111; 14.930556 ŠKODA AUTO a.s.
Kvasiny (Czech Republic) Kodiaq, Karoq, SEAT Ateca 50°12′17″N 16°15′28″E / 50.204722°N 16.257778°E / 50.204722; 16.257778
Vrchlabí (Czech Republic) Transmissions 50°36′39″N 15°37′28″E / 50.610972°N 15.624444°E / 50.610972; 15.624444
Bratislava (Slovakia) Karoq, Superb 48°14′03″N 16°59′16″E / 48.234135°N 16.98791°E / 48.234135; 16.98791 VOLKSWAGEN SLOVAKIA, a.s. (VW AG subsidiary)
Pune (India) Kushaq, Slavia, Kodiaq 18°44′32″N 73°49′07″E / 18.74228667°N 73.81853167°E / 18.74228667; 73.81853167 Škoda Auto India Pvt Ltd. (Škoda Auto a.s. subsidiary)
Aurangabad (India) Octavia, Superb 19°52′23″N 75°29′18″E / 19.873056°N 75.488333°E / 19.873056; 75.488333
Kaluga (Russia) Rapid (production suspended) 54°34′28″N 36°20′40″E / 54.574444°N 36.344444°E / 54.574444; 36.344444 OOO Volkswagen Group Rus (VW AG subsidiary)
Nizhny Novgorod (Russia) Karoq, Kodiaq, Octavia (production suspended) 56°14′32″N 43°53′16″E / 56.242235°N 43.887655°E / 56.242235; 43.887655 OOO Avtomobilnyj zavod «GAZ» (GAZ Group subsidiary)
Anting (China) Fabia, Kamiq, Kamiq GT 31°17′45″N 121°10′40″E / 31.295833°N 121.177778°E / 31.295833; 121.177778 SAIC Volkswagen Automotive Company, Ltd. (VW AG joint venture)
Ningbo (China) Octavia, Karoq 30°20′29″N 121°19′26″E / 30.3412579°N 121.3237526°E / 30.3412579; 121.3237526
Nanjing (China) Superb 31°56′48″N 118°47′47″E / 31.9465982°N 118.7962963°E / 31.9465982; 118.7962963
Changsha (China) Kodiaq 28°10′15″N 113°10′35″E / 28.170958°N 113.176422°E / 28.170958; 113.176422

Motorsport edit

 
Škoda 966 Supersport (1950) in Škoda Museum
 
With Škoda Fabia R5, Škoda Motorsport team won the 2015, 2016, 2017 and 2018 World Rally Championship-2, which focuses on production-based cars.

The Škoda brand has been engaged in motor sport since 1901, and has gained a number of titles with various vehicles around the world. The team had competed as a manufacturer in the Intercontinental Rally Challenge (before it merged with ERC in 2013) and World Rally Championship between 1999 and 2005. Now it competes in the European Rally Championship and WRC-2.

Until the final season of IRC in 2012, Škoda Motorsport was the most successful manufacturer with a total of 27 points, winning the rallying series in 2010–2012. Since 2013, When the two competing series were merged, it continued to compete in the European Rally Championship.

Škoda Motorsport drivers won with the Škoda Fabia S2000 the European Rally Championships in 2012–2014.

World Rally Championship edit

Following a long history of class victories in lower levels of motorsport, Škoda became a participant in the FIA World Rally Championship in the 1999 season, with World Rally Car models of the Škoda Octavia. Škoda's best result with the Octavia WRC was Armin Schwarz's third place at the 2001 Safari Rally. From mid 2003, the Octavia was replaced by the smaller Škoda Fabia. Škoda used the 2004 season to develop the car further, but did not achieve much success the following season. However, at the season-ending Rally Australia, 1995 world champion Colin McRae was running second before retiring. Škoda then withdrew from the series, and the 2006 season saw Škoda represented by the semi-privateer Red Bull Škoda Team. Jan Kopecký drove the Fabia WRC to fifth place at the Rally Catalunya, and as late as the 2007 Rallye Deutschland the Fabia still achieved a fifth-place result, again in the hands of Kopecký. Former works Ford and Citroen driver François Duval also drove a Fabia WRC in 2006 for the privateer First Motorsport team, achieving a sixth-place finish in Catalunya.

World Rally Championship-2 edit

In 2009, Škoda entered the Intercontinental Rally Challenge (IRC) for the first time, using the Fabia S2000, winning three rallies and finishing second in both the drivers and manufacturers championship. In 2010, Škoda won a total of seven IRC events winning both the manufacturers and driver championship for Juho Hänninen. These achievements were repeated in the following two seasons, with Andreas Mikkelsen as the drivers' champion. In 2013, the Intercontinental Rally Challenge was merged with the European Rally Championship (ERC) and the team gained the drivers' championship title once again for Jan Kopecký. The car was also raced by privateers in several championships, including Red Bull, Barwa, Rene Georges and Rufa in the 2010 Super 2000 World Rally Championship.

Škoda Motorsport won the 2015, 2016, 2017 and 2018 WRC-2 championships with Škoda Fabia R5.

Bonneville Speedway edit

In August 2011, a special Škoda Octavia vRS set a world record at the Bonneville Speedway and became the fastest production car in the world with an engine up to two litres, when it hit 227 mph (365 km/h).[71] The current fastest production Škoda car is the Škoda Superb III, with a top speed of 250 km/h (160 mph) and an acceleration from 0 to 100 km/h (0 to 62 mph) in 5.8 seconds.

Current models edit

edit

In 1923, two different trademarks were registered at the Office for Innovation and Model Registration in Plzeň. The first depicted a winged arrow pointing to the right with five feathers in a circle and the second was a winged arrow with three feathers. The famous winged arrow with three feathers still forms the Škoda logo today. The ŠKODA text was added to the logo in 1936. The arrow represents speed, the wings progress and freedom, the eye precision and the circle unity, completeness, world and harmony.[72][73] The story goes that, on his travels through the US, Emil Škoda had once been so taken with a Native American's feathered headdress that he had returned to Plzeň with a relief image which inspired the logo.[74]

See also edit

Explanatory notes edit

  1. ^ More information about the Werner motor bicycles: Twycross, Tony (April 2005). "Auto Cycling, 1890s Style". The Moped Archive.

Citations edit

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  3. ^ a b c d "Volkswagen AG | Škoda Annual Report 2021". Volkswagen AG. Retrieved 6 September 2022.
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  10. ^ Piotr S. Wandycz, 'The Price of Freedom: A History of East Central Europe from the Middle Ages to The Present', (London, 1992), p. 171
  11. ^ a b c "Český průmyslový svět – 1905". Digital library of the National Library ČR.
  12. ^ Jetschgo, Johannes (2019). Škoda. A Car That Made History. Prague: Vitalis. pp. 8–9. ISBN 978-3-89919-652-8.
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  42. ^ "New Skoda Kodiaq SUV: prices, specs and everything you need to know".
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  47. ^ Pavel Svačina. Škoda bude vyrábět baterie pro elektroauta. Pojede na ně i Vision E. (Czech). Mladá fronta DNES. Published on 10 September 2017.
  48. ^ "2020 Skoda Superb iV hybrid revealed: pricing, specs and release date". What Car?. Retrieved 3 June 2019.
  49. ^ Jim Holder. Volkswagen Group hybrid hot hatches due from 2020. Autocar. Published on 2 November 2017.
  50. ^ Jimi Beckwith. Skoda Vision X small SUV concept previews 2019 production model. Autocar. Published on 1 February 2019.
  51. ^ Rachel Burgess. Skoda confirms five electrified models in next two years. Autocar. Published on 21 March 2018.
  52. ^ Škoda zvýšila zisk na 31,8 miliardy Kč; chce investovat do Boleslavi. Czech News Agency. 21 March 2018.
  53. ^ "Electric Skoda Citigo e will go on sale next year". Fleetnews.co.uk. Retrieved 3 June 2019.
  54. ^ Luke Wilkinson. All-electric Skoda Citigo e iV revealed for 2019 with 165-mile range. Auto Express. 23 May 2019
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  56. ^ "GENERAL PRESENTATION ŠKODA 2008" (PDF). Institute for Industrial and Financial Management. p. 15. Retrieved 28 August 2011.
  57. ^ (PDF). Prague: Volkswagen Group. 21 June 2004. Archived from the original (PDF) on 29 July 2012. Retrieved 6 November 2012. 29 July 2012 at the Wayback Machine
  58. ^ (PDF). 15 March 2013. Archived from the original (PDF) on 24 September 2015. Retrieved 15 March 2013. 24 September 2015 at the Wayback Machine
  59. ^ . Archived from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 27 January 2014. 4 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine
  60. ^ . Archived from the original on 6 March 2017. Retrieved 13 January 2017. 6 March 2017 at the Wayback Machine
  61. ^ a b ŠKODA AUTO Annual Report 2020 (PDF) (Report). Mladá Boleslav, Czech Republic: ŠKODA AUTO a.s. 2021. Retrieved 30 March 2021.
  62. ^ ŠKODA AUTO Annual Report 2021 (PDF) (Report). Mladá Boleslav, Czech Republic: ŠKODA AUTO a.s. 2022. Retrieved 25 May 2022.
  63. ^ a b c ŠKODA AUTO Annual Report 2022 (PDF) (Report). Mladá Boleslav, Czech Republic: ŠKODA AUTO a.s. 2023. Retrieved 23 April 2023.
  64. ^ Václav Lavička. Nenápadná Škoda je ziskovější než hrdá Audi. Ostatním v koncernu může sloužit za vzor, tvrdí německý tisk. Hospodářské noviny. Published on 1 August 2016.
  65. ^ Skoda to Make Low-Cost Cars for Iran. Financial Tribune. Published on 27 August 2017.
  66. ^ VW Singapore plots Skoda comeback. The Straits Times. Published on 11 November 2017.
  67. ^ . Archived from the original on 2 December 2017. 2 December 2017 at the Wayback Machine
  68. ^ "Annual Report 2019" (PDF). ŠKODA AUTO COMPANY.
  69. ^ "About ŠKODA". www.skoda-auto.com. Retrieved 21 September 2020.
  70. ^ "Portrait & Production Plants". Volkswagen Group. Retrieved 29 January 2017.
  71. ^ "Škoda Octavia vRS je nejrychlejším dvoulitrem světa" [Skoda Octavia VRS is the fastest two-liter in the world] (in Czech). IHNED.cz. 28 August 2011.
  72. ^ "Plzeňská Škodovka změnila logo".
  73. ^ "Na šumperském Parsu se skví legendární logo s okřídleným šípem a nápis Škoda". Šumpersko.net.
  74. ^ Jetschgo, Johannes (2019). Škoda. A Car That Made History. Prague: Vitalis. p. 40. ISBN 9783899196528.
  75. ^ "Logo Timeline". www.skoda-auto.com. Retrieved 12 October 2023.

General and cited references edit

  • Margolius, Ivan & Meisl, Charles (1992). Škoda Laurin & Klement. London: Osprey. ISBN 1-85532-237-4.
  • Jetschgo, Johannes (2019). Škoda: A Car That Made History. Prague: Vitalis. ISBN 978-3-89919-652-8

External links edit

  • Official website
  • Škoda Auto's channel on YouTube
  • Skoda-storyboard – official news of Škoda Auto
  • Carsaddon – news of Škoda Auto
  • Skoda – Škoda Auto cars and news in Egypt

Škoda, auto, confused, with, separate, engineering, company, Škoda, transportation, former, parent, Škoda, works, czech, pronunciation, ˈʃkoda, often, shortened, Škoda, czech, automobile, manufacturer, established, 1925, successor, laurin, klement, headquarter. Not to be confused with the now separate engineering company Skoda Transportation or the former parent Skoda Works Skoda Auto a s Czech pronunciation ˈʃkoda often shortened to Skoda is a Czech automobile manufacturer established in 1925 as the successor to Laurin amp Klement and headquartered in Mlada Boleslav Czech Republic Skoda Works became state owned in 1948 After 1991 it was gradually privatized to the German Volkswagen Group becoming a partial subsidiary in 1994 and a wholly owned ordinary 2000 4 5 Skoda Auto a s Logo since 2023 1 Headquarters in Mlada Boleslav Czech RepublicCompany typeSubsidiaryIndustryAutomotivePredecessorLaurin amp KlementFounded1925 99 years ago 1925 FounderVaclav Laurin and Vaclav KlementHeadquartersMlada Boleslav Czech RepublicArea servedWorldwide except Japan and North America Key peopleKlaus Zellmer Chairman of the Board of Management Alain Favey Member of the Board of Management Karsten Schnake Member of the Board of Management ProductsAutomobilesElectric vehiclesProduction outputc 802 000 units 2021 2 3 Revenue 17 7 billion 2021 3 CZK 422 6 billion 2 Operating income 1 08 billion 2021 2 3 CZK 26 21 billion 2 Net incomeCZK 22 41 billion 2021 2 Total assetsCZK 231 46 billion 2021 2 Total equityCZK 101 52 billion 2021 2 Number of employees36 032 2021 2 ParentVolkswagen GroupDivisionsSkoda MotorsportSubsidiariesSkoda Auto Ceska republikaSkoda Auto Deutschland GmbHSkoda Auto Slovensko s r o Skoda Auto Volkswagen IndiaWebsiteskoda auto wbr comFootnotes references 2 3 Skoda automobiles are sold in over 100 countries and in 2018 total global sales reached 1 25 million units an increase of 4 4 from the previous year 6 The operating profit was 1 6 billion in 2017 an increase of 34 6 over the previous year 7 8 As of 2017 Skoda s profit margin was the second highest of all Volkswagen AG brands after Porsche 9 Contents 1 History 1 1 Laurin amp Klement 1 2 Skoda 1 3 World War II 1 4 Post World War II 1 5 Volkswagen Group subsidiary 1 6 Growth strategy 2 Electrification strategy 3 Sales and markets 3 1 Sales figures 3 2 Markets 4 Production 5 Motorsport 5 1 World Rally Championship 5 2 World Rally Championship 2 5 3 Bonneville Speedway 6 Current models 7 Logo 8 See also 9 Explanatory notes 10 Citations 11 General and cited references 12 External linksHistory editThe Skoda Works was established as an arms manufacturer in 1859 It was one of the largest European industrial conglomerates of the 20th century founded by Czech engineer Emil Skoda in 1859 in Plzen then in the Kingdom of Bohemia Austrian Empire It is the predecessor of today s Skoda Auto Doosan Skoda Power and Skoda Transportation companies Laurin amp Klement edit Main article Laurin amp Klement nbsp Founders Vaclav Klement left and Vaclav Laurin 1895 nbsp Laurin amp Klement Type A 1905 As with many long established car manufacturers the company that became Skoda Auto started in the early 1890s by manufacturing bicycles 10 Skoda then Laurin amp Klement factories were founded in 1896 as a velocipede manufacturer 11 In 1894 130 years ago 1894 26 year old Vaclav Klement 1868 1938 who was a bookseller in Mlada Boleslav Kingdom of Bohemia today s Czech Republic then part of Austria Hungary was unable to obtain spare parts to repair his German bicycle Klement returned his bicycle to the manufacturers Seidel and Naumann with a letter in Czech asking them to carry out repairs only to receive a reply in German stating If you want us to answer you we insist that you convey your message in a language we understand 12 Not satisfied with the reply and realising the business potential Klement despite having no technical experience decided to start a bicycle repair shop which Vaclav Laurin and he opened in 1896 in Mlada Boleslav Before going into partnership with Klement Laurin was an established bicycle manufacturer in the nearby town of Turnov 13 In 1898 after moving to their newly built factory the pair bought a Werner Motocyclette nb 1 Laurin amp Klement s first motorcyclette powered by an engine mounted on the handlebars driving the front wheels proved dangerous and unreliable an early accident on it cost Laurin a front tooth To design a safer machine with its structure around the engine the pair wrote to German ignition specialist Robert Bosch for advice on a different electromagnetic system citation needed Their new Slavia motorcycle made its debut in 1899 and the company became the first motorcycle factory in Central Europe 11 In 1900 with a company workforce of 32 Slavia exports began and 150 machines were shipped to London for the Hewtson firm Shortly afterwards the press credited them as makers of the first motorcycle 14 15 By 1905 the firm was manufacturing automobiles making it the second oldest car manufacturer in the Czech lands after Tatra The company with an area of 7 800 square metres 0 78 ha had a workforce of 320 and used 170 special machine tools power driven by 100 horsepower 75 kW of steam power 11 The first model Voiturette A was a success and the company was established both within Austria Hungary and internationally 16 Skoda edit nbsp Skoda 422 1929 After World War I the Laurin amp Klement company began producing trucks but in 1924 after running into problems and being affected by a fire on their premises the company sought a new partner Meanwhile Akciova spolecnost drive Skodovy zavody Limited Company formerly the Skoda Works an arms manufacturer and multisector concern in Plzen which had become one of the largest industrial enterprises in Europe and the largest in Czechoslovakia sought to enlarge its nonarms manufacturing base so acquired Laurin amp Klement in 1925 It also started manufacturing cars in cooperation with Hispano Suiza Most of the later production took place under Skoda s name nbsp Engineer and industrialist Emil Skoda nbsp Skoda logo in 1930s An assembly line was used for production from 1930 onwards In the same year a formal spin off of the car manufacture into a new company Akciova spolecnost pro automobilovy prumysl or abbreviated ASAP took place ASAP remained a wholly owned subsidiary of the Skoda Works and continued to sell cars under the Skoda marque Apart from the factory in Mlada Boleslav it included also the firm s representation sales offices and services as well as a central workshop in Prague At the time the car factory in Mlada Boleslav covered an area of 215 000 m2 and employed 3 750 blue collar and 500 white collar workers nbsp Skoda S 932 prototype 1932In 1932 ASAP Skoda in Mlada Boleslav Bohemia produced a type Skoda 932 prototype of a streamlined 4 seater two door car with a rear air cooled flat four engine designed by Karel Hrdlicka and Vsevold Korolkov This car s bodywork closely resembled the small car designs yet to come 17 After a decline caused by the economic depression Skoda introduced a new line of cars in the 1930s which significantly differed from its previous products A new design of chassis with backbone tube and all around independent suspension was developed under the leadership of chief engineer Vladimir Matous and modelled on the one first introduced by Hans Ledwinka in Tatra First used on model Skoda 420 Standard in 1933 it aimed at solving insufficient torsional stiffness of the ladder frame 18 The new design of chassis became the basis for models Popular 845 1 089 cc Rapid 1 165 1 766 cc Favorit 1 802 2 091 cc and Superb 2 492 3 991 cc 18 While in 1933 Skoda had a 14 share of the Czechoslovak car market and occupied third place behind Praga and Tatra the new line made it a market leader by 1936 with a 39 share in 1938 18 World War II edit During the occupation of Czechoslovakia in World War II the Skoda Works were turned into part of the Reichswerke Hermann Goring serving the Nazi German war effort by producing components for military terrain vehicles military planes other weapons components and cartridge cases Vehicle output decreased from 7 052 in 1939 to 683 in 1944 of which only 35 were passenger cars Between January and May 1945 316 trucks were produced 19 The UK and US air forces bombed the Skoda works repeatedly between 1940 and 1945 The final massive air raid took place on 25 April 1945 and resulted in the almost complete destruction of the Skoda armament works and about 1 000 dead or injured 20 Post World War II edit nbsp Skoda 1101 Tudor Roadster 1949 When by July 1945 the Mlada Boleslav factory had been reconstructed production of Skoda s first post World War II car the 1101 series began It was essentially an updated version of the pre World War II Skoda Popular In the autumn of 1948 Skoda along with all other large manufacturers became part of the communist planned economy which meant it was separated from the parent company Skoda Works In spite of unfavourable political conditions and losing contact with technical development in noncommunist countries Skoda retained a good reputation until the 1960s producing models such as the Skoda 440 Spartak 445 Octavia Felicia and Skoda 1000 MB 21 nbsp Skoda Octavia Super 1960 In late 1959 the Skoda Felicia a compact four cylinder convertible coupe was imported into the United States for model year 1960 Its retail price was around US 2 700 for which one could purchase a V8 domestic car that was larger more comfortable and had more luxury and convenience features gasoline retailed for less than 30 cents per US gallon so fuel economy was not of primary importance in the United States at that time Those Felicias that made it to American ownership soon had a number of reliability problems further damaging the car s reputation The Felicia was therefore a poor seller in the U S and leftover cars ended up being hied off at a fraction of the original retail list Since that time Skoda automobiles have not been imported into the U S for retail sale citation needed nbsp Skoda MB 1000 1966 In the late 1980s Skoda then named Automobilove zavody narodni podnik or abbreviated AZNP was still manufacturing cars that conceptually dated back to the 1960s and in Western Europe at least were aimed squarely at the budget end of the market Rear engined models such as the Skoda 105 120 Estelle and Rapid sold steadily and performed well against more modern makes in races such as the RAC Rally in the 1970s and 1980s They won their class in the RAC rally for 17 years running They were powered by a 130 brake horsepower 97 kW 1 289 cubic centimetres 78 7 cu in engine In spite of its dated image and becoming the subject of negative jokes What do you call a Skoda with a sunroof A skip Skodas remained a common sight on the roads of the United Kingdom and Western Europe throughout the 1970s and 1980s 22 Sport versions of the Estelle and earlier models were produced using the name Rapid Soft top versions were also available The Rapid was once described as the poor man s Porsche 23 and had significant sales success in the UK during the 1980s 22 To drivers in the UK the vehicles which chugged off Skoda s production line in Pilsen Czechoslovakia embodied all that was wrong with the planned economies of the Soviet satellite states Of course that the Skoda became such a figure of fun was in part due to its ubiquity on Britain s roads The company must have been doing something right BBC report on Skoda sales in the 1980s 22 nbsp Skoda Favorit 1987 1995 In 1987 the Favorit was introduced and was one of a trio of compact front wheel drive hatchbacks from the three main Eastern Bloc manufacturers around that time the others being VAZ s Lada Samara and Zastava s Yugo Sana The Favorit s appearance was the work of Italian design company Bertone With some motor technology licensed from western Europe but still using the Skoda designed 1289 cc engine Skoda engineers designed a car comparable to western production The technological gap still existed but began closing rapidly The Favorit was very popular in Czechoslovakia and other Eastern Bloc countries It also sold well in Western Europe especially in the UK and Denmark due to its low price and was regarded as solid and reliable However it was perceived as having poor value compared with contemporary Western European designs The Favorit s trim levels were improved and it continued to be sold until the introduction of the Felicia in 1994 Volkswagen Group subsidiary edit nbsp The Skoda Felicia from 1994 was the first new model after takeover by Volkswagen Group Until 1990 Skoda was still making its outdated range of rear engined small family cars although it had started production of the Favorit front wheel drive hatchback in 1987 as an eventual replacement The fall of communism with the Velvet Revolution brought great changes to Czechoslovakia and most industries were subject to privatization In the case of Skoda Automobile the state authorities brought in a strong foreign partner The tender for privatization was announced in 1990 24 different companies were registered for the tender while only eight of them expressed a serious interest BMW GM Renault Volvo Volkswagen Ford Fiat and Mercedes Benz In August 1990 VW and Renault were on the shortlist 5 Renault first offered to terminate Favorit production and replace it with the outdated Renault 18 derivative and new Renault Twingo which would have eliminated the Skoda brand This offer was declined and Renault prepared a new one They offered a 60 40 joint venture 40 share of Renault while Skoda Favorit production was to be retained and produced side by side with the Renault 19 and producing engine units gearboxes and other components for Renault Total investment would have been US 2 6 billion US 6 billion in 2019 5 Volkswagen offered to continue Favorit production and preserve the Skoda brand including retention of research and development Volkswagen offered a purchase of 30 Skoda share gradually increasing to 70 Volkswagen s total investment would have been US 6 6 billion US 15 billion in 2019 by 2000 The government inclined on the Renault side while the Skoda trade union preferred VW because it offered significantly larger potential for development of the company 5 Volkswagen was chosen by the Czech government on 9 December 1990 24 and as a result on 28 March 1991 a joint venture partnership agreement with Volkswagen took place marked by the transfer of a 30 share to the Volkswagen Group on 16 April 1991 raised later on 19 December 1994 to 60 3 and the year after on 11 December 1995 to 70 of its shares with the aim of making VW the largest and controlling shareholder of Skoda 25 On 30 May 2000 Volkswagen AG bought the remaining 30 of the company thus making Skoda Auto a wholly owned subsidiary of the group Backed by Volkswagen Group expertise and investments the design both style and engineering has improved greatly The 1994 model Felicia was effectively a reskin of the Favorit but quality and equipment improvements helped and in the Czech Republic the car was perceived as good value for money and became popular Sales improved across Europe 5 including the United Kingdom where the Felicia was one of the best ranking cars in customer satisfaction surveys nbsp The Octavia is the bestselling Skoda Volkswagen AG chairman Ferdinand Piech personally chose Dirk van Braeckel as head of design and the subsequent Octavia and Fabia models made their way to the demanding European Union markets They are built on common Volkswagen Group floorpans The Fabia launched at the end of 1999 formed the basis for later versions of the Volkswagen Polo and SEAT Ibiza while the Octavia launched in 1996 has shared its floorpan with a host of cars the most popular of which is the Volkswagen Golf Mk4 The perception of Skoda in Western Europe has completely changed since the takeover by VW 26 in stark comparison with the reputation of the cars throughout the 1980s described by some as the laughing stock of the automotive world 27 28 As technical development progressed and attractive new models were marketed Skoda s image was initially slow to improve In the UK a major change was achieved with the ironic It is a Skoda honest campaign which began in 2000 when the Fabia launched In a 2003 advertisement on British television a new employee on the production line is fitting Skoda badges on the car bonnets When some attractive looking cars come along he stands back not fitting the badge since they look so good they cannot be Skodas 29 This market campaign worked by confronting Skoda s image problem head on a tactic which marketing professionals regarded as high risk By 2005 Skoda was selling over 30 000 cars a year in the UK a market share over 1 For the first time in its UK history a waiting list developed for deliveries from Skoda UK owners have consistently ranked the brand at or near the top of customer satisfaction surveys since the late 1990s In 1991 Skoda built 172 000 units exporting 26 of its production to 30 countries while in 2000 it built 435 000 units exporting 82 of its production to 72 countries 30 Growth strategy edit nbsp Skoda Auto plant in Mlada BoleslavOne of the most important years for Skoda Auto was 2010 in terms of both products and management On 1 September 2010 Prof Dr H C Winfried Vahland assumed responsibility for the management of the company becoming the CEO of Skoda Auto In the same year Skoda set forth plans to double the company s annual sales to at least 1 5 million by 2018 later known as the Growth Strategy Czech Rustova strategie 31 At the 2010 Paris Motor Show in September 2010 the company unveiled the Octavia Green E Line This e car concept was the forerunner to the e car test fleet that Skoda released in 2012 The final first generation Octavia Tour was produced at the Mlada Boleslav plant in November 2010 The worldwide production of this model exceeded 1 4 million units since its release in 1996 In 2010 for the first time in history China overtook German sales to become Skoda s largest individual market 32 In 2011 Skoda Auto celebrated its 20 year partnership with the Volkswagen Group More than 75 000 visitors attended an open house event held in Mlada Boleslav in the April Earlier that year the company provided details on its 2018 Growth Strategy for at least one new or completely revised model to be released every six months 33 34 With this in mind the company redesigned its logo and CI which was presented at the 2011 Geneva Motor Show Skoda s main attraction at the event was the VisionD design concept a forerunner to the future third generation Octavia Skoda presented the MissionL design study at the IAA in Frankfurt am Main in September which was to become the basis of the company s forthcoming compact model the European Rapid nbsp Skoda Auto is one of the largest car manufacturers in Central Europe In 2014 1 037 200 cars were sold worldwide a record for the company In the same year the company started production of the new Rapid model in Pune India October 2011 and launched the Skoda Citigo at Volkswagen s Bratislava plant November 2011 In 2012 Skoda introduced two new mass production models The European version of the Rapid premiered at the Paris Motor Show This car was a successor to the first generation Octavia in terms of its price bracket The second model was the third generation Octavia which premiered in December 2012 In the same month local production of the Yeti was launched at the Nizhny Novgorod GAZ factory 35 In 2012 Skoda introduced an emission free on the street fleet of Octavia Green E Line e cars on Czech roads to be used by external partners Since internal tests on the fleet in late 2011 the e fleet had driven more than 250 000 km During the same year Skoda celebrated several milestones including 14 million Skoda cars being produced since 1905 January 36 three million Fabias May 37 500 000 Superbs at the Kvasiny plant June 38 and 5 years of Skoda operations in China 35 Massive rejuvenation of the model range was a major tune for 2013 at Skoda The Czech car maker launched the third generation Octavia Combi and Octavia RS both liftback and estate as well as facelifted Superb and Superb Combi They were accompanied by brand new members of the Rapid family as the Rapid Spaceback the first Skoda hatchback car in the compact segment and the Chinese version of the Rapid The Yeti also faced significant changes With the facelift two design variants of Skoda s compact SUV are now available the city likeoriented Yeti and rugged Yeti Outdoor Chinese customers were also given a Yeti with an extended wheelbase nbsp Part of the board of directors at the Geneva Motor Show with Skoda Vision X 2018 from left Christian Strube Klaus Dieter Schurmann Alain Favey Bernhard Maier Michael Oeljeklaus and Dieter SeemannIn 2015 Volkswagen admitted that it had installed pollution cheating software in many of its cars to fool regulators that its cars met emissions standards when in fact they polluted at much higher levels than government standards About 1 2 million Skoda cars worldwide were fitted with this emissions cheating device 39 Skoda stated that Volkswagen would recall and cover refitting costs for all of the cars affected by the scandal In 2015 Skoda was voted the most reliable car brand in the UK 40 A corporate strategy was launched in 2015 to produce a range of all electric cars from 2019 41 Skoda Auto started to manufacture the large seven seat SUV Skoda Kodiaq in 2016 42 it was introduced at the Paris Motor Show in October 2016 43 and sales began at early 2017 In the second half of 2017 sales began of the new compact SUV Skoda Karoq which officially replaced the Skoda Yeti The automaker introduced in December 2018 a new small family car the Skoda Scala In February 2019 the company introduced in Geneva the new subcompact crossover Skoda Kamiq Electrification strategy edit nbsp The fully electric Skoda Enyaq iV has been produced since November 2020 and six fully electric models are to be available by 2025 In 2015 new Skoda chairman Bernhard Maier stated that the Volkswagen Group is working on a modular new electric platform and we are in the team and there is no alternative to electrification 41 New Skoda corporate Strategy 2025 which replaces the previous Strategy 2018 aims to start production of a fully electric vehicle in 2020 41 and five electric models across different segments by 2025 44 In 2017 Auto Shanghai Skoda displayed its Vision E concept for an all electric 300 bhp coupe SUV 45 with level 3 autonomy capability and 500 kilometres 310 mi range 46 It is based on the VW MEB platform and Skoda Auto will also manufacture electric vehicle batteries for the Volkswagen Group in its facility in the Czech Republic 47 The second development stage the Skoda Vision iV was revealed in March 2019 A plug in hybrid car the Skoda Superb iV was available for sale from early 2020 48 and a small SUV model Skoda Kamiq with a natural gas electric hybrid powertrain and a hybrid Fabia from later the same year 41 49 50 By March 2018 the electrification plan was expanded to 10 electrified models for 2025 six fully electric cars and four plugin hybrids Out of these five models are to be available by 2020 51 In 2018 the brand launched its largest ever investment plan of 2 billion over five years into its electrification 52 The brand s first fully electric car a city car Skoda Citigo e iV was sold from 2019 to 2020 53 54 The all electric Skoda Enyaq iV is available for sale since September 2020 Skoda Enyaq Coupe is sold from May 2023 Sales and markets editSkoda has maintained sound financial stability over recent years In 2013 the brand achieved sales revenues totalling 10 3 billion 2012 10 4 billion Due to the weak economic situation in many European countries and the expansion of the model range operating profit reached a modest 522 million 2012 712 million Skoda achieved a successful start to 2014 As well as recording the highest number of deliveries to customers in a first quarter ever 247 200 up 12 1 it recorded a significant increase in sales revenue 23 7 to almost 3 billion Operating profit increased 65 2 to 185 million over the previous year Sales figures edit ModelSkoda Felicia Skoda Octavia Skoda Fabia Skoda Superb Skoda Roomster Skoda Yeti Skoda Rapid Skoda Citigo Skoda Kodiaq Skoda Karoq Skoda Kamiq Skoda Scala Skoda Enyaq iV Skoda Kushaq Skoda Slavia Total1994 55 1995 56 1996 57 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 58 2013 59 2014 2015 7 2016 60 2017 2018 6 2019 61 2020 61 2021 62 2022 63 172 000 210 000 261 000 288 458 261 127 241 256 148 500 44 963 47 876 102 373 143 251 158 503 164 134 164 017 165 635 181 683 233 322 270 274 309 951 344 857 317 335 349 746 387 200 409 360 359 600 389 300 432 300 436 300 418 800 388 200 363 722 257 364 200 771 141 112 823 128 872 250 978 264 641 260 988 247 600 236 698 243 982 232 890 246 561 264 173 229 045 266 800 255 025 202 000 160 500 192 400 202 800 206 500 190 900 172 793 105 459 99 104 92 663 177 16 867 23 135 22 392 22 091 20 989 20 530 25 645 44 548 98 873 116 700 106 847 94 400 91 100 80 200 139 100 150 900 138 100 104 755 86 151 66 146 60 840 14 422 66 661 57 467 47 152 32 332 36 000 39 249 33 300 29 600 16 600 11 018 52 604 70 300 90 952 82 400 102 900 99 500 95 600 69 500 13 100 10 2 1 700 9 292 103 800 221 400 194 300 212 800 211 500 191 500 142 118 79 702 63 657 17 296 509 36 687 45 200 42 500 40 200 40 700 37 100 39 200 31 199 14 971 4 373 3 100 000 149 200 171 794 131 590 98 566 94 455 6 300 115 700 152 708 137 223 119 156 87 716 27 900 64 597 128 539 120 742 96 269 39 071 63 181 48 154 39 538 634 44 718 53 678 12 815 26 761 20 931172 000 210 000 261 000 336 334 363 500 385 330 435 403 460 252 445 525 449 758 451 675 492 111 549 667 630 032 674 530 684 226 762 600 879 200 949 412 920 800 1 037 200 1 055 500 1 127 700 1 200 500 1 253 700 1 242 816 1 004 816 878 202 731 262 Markets edit nbsp Worldwide sales of Skoda carsAs of August 2016 Skoda was being sold in 102 countries 64 In 2022 the top markets for Skoda by number of sales were Germany 134 260 Czech Republic 71 152 India 51 865 Great Britain 49 555 and Poland 44 985 63 In the Asia Pacific region Skoda is also being sold in Australia New Zealand Taiwan and Brunei Skoda is also planning to expand into Iran where imports are to be started from 2018 and production of vehicles by 2020 65 Expansion strategy also includes Singapore 66 Production editSkoda cars are now made in factories in the Czech Republic 635 213 cars India 55 750 cars China 41 936 cars Slovakia 16 116 cars and Russia 15 979 cars 63 A smaller number of Skoda models are additionally manufactured in Solomonovo Ukraine through local partner Till 2020 also there was manufacturing in Oskemen Kazakhstan 67 The following table lists the factories and their production models in 2019 68 69 Manufacturing plant Production models Location Operator 70 Mlada Boleslav Czech Republic Fabia Octavia Kamiq Karoq Scala Enyaq iV EA211 engines 50 25 16 N 14 55 50 E 50 421111 N 14 930556 E 50 421111 14 930556 SKODA AUTO a s Kvasiny Czech Republic Kodiaq Karoq SEAT Ateca 50 12 17 N 16 15 28 E 50 204722 N 16 257778 E 50 204722 16 257778Vrchlabi Czech Republic Transmissions 50 36 39 N 15 37 28 E 50 610972 N 15 624444 E 50 610972 15 624444Bratislava Slovakia Karoq Superb 48 14 03 N 16 59 16 E 48 234135 N 16 98791 E 48 234135 16 98791 VOLKSWAGEN SLOVAKIA a s VW AG subsidiary Pune India Kushaq Slavia Kodiaq 18 44 32 N 73 49 07 E 18 74228667 N 73 81853167 E 18 74228667 73 81853167 Skoda Auto India Pvt Ltd Skoda Auto a s subsidiary Aurangabad India Octavia Superb 19 52 23 N 75 29 18 E 19 873056 N 75 488333 E 19 873056 75 488333Kaluga Russia Rapid production suspended 54 34 28 N 36 20 40 E 54 574444 N 36 344444 E 54 574444 36 344444 OOO Volkswagen Group Rus VW AG subsidiary Nizhny Novgorod Russia Karoq Kodiaq Octavia production suspended 56 14 32 N 43 53 16 E 56 242235 N 43 887655 E 56 242235 43 887655 OOO Avtomobilnyj zavod GAZ GAZ Group subsidiary Anting China Fabia Kamiq Kamiq GT 31 17 45 N 121 10 40 E 31 295833 N 121 177778 E 31 295833 121 177778 SAIC Volkswagen Automotive Company Ltd VW AG joint venture Ningbo China Octavia Karoq 30 20 29 N 121 19 26 E 30 3412579 N 121 3237526 E 30 3412579 121 3237526Nanjing China Superb 31 56 48 N 118 47 47 E 31 9465982 N 118 7962963 E 31 9465982 118 7962963Changsha China Kodiaq 28 10 15 N 113 10 35 E 28 170958 N 113 176422 E 28 170958 113 176422Motorsport edit nbsp Skoda 966 Supersport 1950 in Skoda Museum nbsp With Skoda Fabia R5 Skoda Motorsport team won the 2015 2016 2017 and 2018 World Rally Championship 2 which focuses on production based cars Main article Skoda Motorsport The Skoda brand has been engaged in motor sport since 1901 and has gained a number of titles with various vehicles around the world The team had competed as a manufacturer in the Intercontinental Rally Challenge before it merged with ERC in 2013 and World Rally Championship between 1999 and 2005 Now it competes in the European Rally Championship and WRC 2 Until the final season of IRC in 2012 Skoda Motorsport was the most successful manufacturer with a total of 27 points winning the rallying series in 2010 2012 Since 2013 When the two competing series were merged it continued to compete in the European Rally Championship Skoda Motorsport drivers won with the Skoda Fabia S2000 the European Rally Championships in 2012 2014 World Rally Championship edit Main article World Rally Championship Following a long history of class victories in lower levels of motorsport Skoda became a participant in the FIA World Rally Championship in the 1999 season with World Rally Car models of the Skoda Octavia Skoda s best result with the Octavia WRC was Armin Schwarz s third place at the 2001 Safari Rally From mid 2003 the Octavia was replaced by the smaller Skoda Fabia Skoda used the 2004 season to develop the car further but did not achieve much success the following season However at the season ending Rally Australia 1995 world champion Colin McRae was running second before retiring Skoda then withdrew from the series and the 2006 season saw Skoda represented by the semi privateer Red Bull Skoda Team Jan Kopecky drove the Fabia WRC to fifth place at the Rally Catalunya and as late as the 2007 Rallye Deutschland the Fabia still achieved a fifth place result again in the hands of Kopecky Former works Ford and Citroen driver Francois Duval also drove a Fabia WRC in 2006 for the privateer First Motorsport team achieving a sixth place finish in Catalunya World Rally Championship 2 edit Main article World Rally Championship 2 In 2009 Skoda entered the Intercontinental Rally Challenge IRC for the first time using the Fabia S2000 winning three rallies and finishing second in both the drivers and manufacturers championship In 2010 Skoda won a total of seven IRC events winning both the manufacturers and driver championship for Juho Hanninen These achievements were repeated in the following two seasons with Andreas Mikkelsen as the drivers champion In 2013 the Intercontinental Rally Challenge was merged with the European Rally Championship ERC and the team gained the drivers championship title once again for Jan Kopecky The car was also raced by privateers in several championships including Red Bull Barwa Rene Georges and Rufa in the 2010 Super 2000 World Rally Championship Skoda Motorsport won the 2015 2016 2017 and 2018 WRC 2 championships with Skoda Fabia R5 Bonneville Speedway edit In August 2011 a special Skoda Octavia vRS set a world record at the Bonneville Speedway and became the fastest production car in the world with an engine up to two litres when it hit 227 mph 365 km h 71 The current fastest production Skoda car is the Skoda Superb III with a top speed of 250 km h 160 mph and an acceleration from 0 to 100 km h 0 to 62 mph in 5 8 seconds Current models editMain article List of Skoda vehicles Skoda Enyaq all electric crossover SUV since 2020 Skoda Kodiaq SUV since 2016 Skoda Karoq compact SUV since 2017 Skoda Kamiq crossover SUV since 2019 Skoda Kushaq crossover SUV since 2021 Skoda Superb IV compact executive car since 2023 Skoda Octavia IV small family car since 2019 Skoda Slavia subcompact car since 2022 Skoda Scala small family car since 2019 Skoda Fabia IV supermini since 2021 nbsp Skoda Enyaq since 2020 nbsp Skoda Kodiaq since 2016 nbsp Skoda Karoq since 2017 nbsp Skoda Kamiq since 2019 nbsp Skoda Kushaq since 2021 nbsp Skoda Superb III since 2015 nbsp Skoda Octavia IV since 2019 nbsp Skoda Slavia since 2022 nbsp Skoda Scala since 2019 nbsp Skoda Fabia IV since 2021 Logo editIn 1923 two different trademarks were registered at the Office for Innovation and Model Registration in Plzen The first depicted a winged arrow pointing to the right with five feathers in a circle and the second was a winged arrow with three feathers The famous winged arrow with three feathers still forms the Skoda logo today The SKODA text was added to the logo in 1936 The arrow represents speed the wings progress and freedom the eye precision and the circle unity completeness world and harmony 72 73 The story goes that on his travels through the US Emil Skoda had once been so taken with a Native American s feathered headdress that he had returned to Plzen with a relief image which inspired the logo 74 nbsp 1925 1934 nbsp 1926 1993 Blue also offered nbsp 1986 1990 nbsp 1991 2010 nbsp 2011 2023 75 nbsp 2023 presentSee also edit nbsp Czech Republic portal nbsp Companies portal nbsp Cars portalList of automobile manufacturers of the Czech Republic Skoda Works Avia TatraExplanatory notes edit More information about the Werner motor bicycles Twycross Tony April 2005 Auto Cycling 1890s Style The Moped Archive Citations edit New Skoda logo wordmark revealed to replace emblem on cars Autocar Retrieved 12 October 2023 a b c d e f g h i Annual Report 2021 PDF Skoda IR Retrieved 6 September 2022 a b c d Volkswagen AG Skoda Annual Report 2021 Volkswagen AG Retrieved 6 September 2022 Alle VW Konzernmodelle Teil 3 Seat und Skoda in German Autozeitung de Retrieved 28 August 2011 Archived 5 June 2010 at the Wayback Machine a b c d e Navelek Vojtech 2011 Acquisition of Skoda Auto Company by Volkswagen Group PDF Olomouc a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link a b SKODA delivers 1 25 million vehicles worldwide in 2018 Report Mlada Boleslav Czech Republic SKODA AUTO a s 2019 Retrieved 13 January 2019 Archived 18 January 2020 at the Wayback Machine a b Record breaking 2015 SKODA Delivers 1 06 Million Cars to Customers Archived from the original on 4 March 2016 Retrieved 15 January 2016 Archived 4 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine www ceskenoviny cz Zadne zmeny ve Skode Auto nechystame vzkazuje Volkswagen do Cech Mlada fronta DNES 6 September 2017 Piotr S Wandycz The Price of Freedom A History of East Central Europe from the Middle Ages to The Present London 1992 p 171 a b c Cesky prumyslovy svet 1905 Digital library of the National Library CR Jetschgo Johannes 2019 Skoda A Car That Made History Prague Vitalis pp 8 9 ISBN 978 3 89919 652 8 Jetschgo Johannes 2019 Skoda A Car That Made History Prague Vitalis p 9 ISBN 9783899196528 Skoda Works classiccar4you Archived 20 December 2019 at the Wayback Machine Skoda Company History CarAutoPortal com Archived from the original on 21 December 2010 Retrieved 10 August 2009 Skoda Dezo s Garage Retrieved 29 May 2020 Margolius Ivan June 2023 Skoda s People s Car The Automobile Vol 41 no 4 pp 34 40 a b c Kralik Jan 2008 V soukoli okridleneho sipu Prague Grada Publishing pp 19 22 ISBN 9788024724157 Pavlinek Petr 2008 A Successful Transformation Restructuring of the Czech Automobile Industry Contributions to Economics Physica Verlag doi 10 1007 978 3 7908 2040 9 ISBN 978 3 7908 2039 3 HELL FROM HEAVEN Chapter 35 Mission 31 Pilsen Czechoslovakia Our Last Combat Mission April 25 1945 By Leonard Streitfeld Bombardier 600th Squadron 398th org 25 April 1945 Retrieved on 16 July 2013 Estrin Saul Richet Xavier Brada Josef C 2000 Foreign Direct Investment in Central Eastern Europe Case Studies of Firms in Transition M E Sharpe ISBN 978 0 7656 0255 8 a b c Skoda has last laugh BBC News 24 February 2000 Paul Burrows 13 March 2008 Czech in time for Skoda AVHub VW Skoda Deal Tests Privatization The Christian Science Monitor 23 January 1991 ISSN 0882 7729 Retrieved 13 July 2020 Mlada Boleslav 6 October 2004 SKODA AUTO a s PDF Volkswagen Group Archived from the original PDF on 27 September 2013 Retrieved 6 November 2012 Archived 27 September 2013 at the Wayback Machine Skoda s Marketing Success Goes From Strength To Strength Carpages 17 December 2002 Kevin Massy 28 January 2008 Skoda flagship to get VW s premium nav system CNET Reviews Archived from the original on 5 June 2011 Retrieved 6 February 2010 Archived 5 June 2011 at the Wayback Machine Kealy Steve 16 February 2010 Skoda Octavia Scout 4x4 Carsales com au Archived from the original on 26 February 2015 Retrieved 6 February 2010 Archived 26 February 2015 at the Wayback Machine 4 Brand Strategy PDF The Chartered Institute of Marketing 7 April 2003 pp 22 23 Archived from the original PDF on 29 October 2008 Archived 29 October 2008 at the Wayback Machine New flagship model will compete Skoda rebirth Automotive News Europe 2 July 2001 Retrieved 13 July 2020 McVeigh Paul 2 November 2010 Automotive News Europe Automotive News Europe Automotive News Europe Automotive News Europe 12 February 2012 The Prague Post 2 March 2011 Archived from the original on 5 March 2016 Retrieved 10 April 2014 Archived 5 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine Matt Prior Autocar Autocar a b Alexander Rogan 6 December 2012 Russia Supply Chain Russia Supply Chain Archived from the original on 4 March 2016 Retrieved 10 April 2014 Volkswagen Volkswagen 21 November 2013 Archived from the original on 5 February 2013 Retrieved 10 April 2014 Archived 5 February 2013 at archive today Tim Harrup 11 May 2012 FleetEurope FleetEurope Archived from the original on 4 March 2016 Retrieved 10 April 2014 Archived 4 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine Karthik H 30 December 2013 Indian Autos Blog VW scandal German prosecutors probe Winterkorn as Volkswagen emissions rigging crisis spreads to 2 1 million Audi cars and Skoda models 28 September 2015 Retrieved 28 September 2015 Skoda wins top JD Power honours for dependability www motortrader com 10 August 2015 a b c d Julian Rendell Skoda electric vehicle under development Autocar Published on 16 March 2016 New Skoda Kodiaq SUV prices specs and everything you need to know Kodiaq moment snapshots of Skoda s 7 seat SUV CAR magazine 29 July 2016 Christiaan Hetzner VW s EV platform ready for Skoda Seat brands europe autonews com Crain Communications 10 January 2017 Jimi Beckwith First drive Skoda Vision E concept review Autocar Published on 31 August 2017 Tim Pollard Skoda Vision E it s the Czechs first electric car carmagazine co uk 18 April 2017 Pavel Svacina Skoda bude vyrabet baterie pro elektroauta Pojede na ne i Vision E Czech Mlada fronta DNES Published on 10 September 2017 2020 Skoda Superb iV hybrid revealed pricing specs and release date What Car Retrieved 3 June 2019 Jim Holder Volkswagen Group hybrid hot hatches due from 2020 Autocar Published on 2 November 2017 Jimi Beckwith Skoda Vision X small SUV concept previews 2019 production model Autocar Published on 1 February 2019 Rachel Burgess Skoda confirms five electrified models in next two years Autocar Published on 21 March 2018 Skoda zvysila zisk na 31 8 miliardy Kc chce investovat do Boleslavi Czech News Agency 21 March 2018 Electric Skoda Citigo e will go on sale next year Fleetnews co uk Retrieved 3 June 2019 Luke Wilkinson All electric Skoda Citigo e iV revealed for 2019 with 165 mile range Auto Express 23 May 2019 Case study Skoda Tcworld info December 2008 Archived from the original on 10 February 2011 Archived 10 February 2011 at the Wayback Machine GENERAL PRESENTATION SKODA 2008 PDF Institute for Industrial and Financial Management p 15 Retrieved 28 August 2011 SKODA AUTO a s PDF Prague Volkswagen Group 21 June 2004 Archived from the original PDF on 29 July 2012 Retrieved 6 November 2012 Archived 29 July 2012 at the Wayback Machine vwagfy2012 PDF 15 March 2013 Archived from the original PDF on 24 September 2015 Retrieved 15 March 2013 Archived 24 September 2015 at the Wayback Machine SKODA 2013 Success with new models Archived from the original on 4 March 2016 Retrieved 27 January 2014 Archived 4 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine SKODA delivered 1 127 700 vehicles last year Archived from the original on 6 March 2017 Retrieved 13 January 2017 Archived 6 March 2017 at the Wayback Machine a b SKODA AUTO Annual Report 2020 PDF Report Mlada Boleslav Czech Republic SKODA AUTO a s 2021 Retrieved 30 March 2021 SKODA AUTO Annual Report 2021 PDF Report Mlada Boleslav Czech Republic SKODA AUTO a s 2022 Retrieved 25 May 2022 a b c SKODA AUTO Annual Report 2022 PDF Report Mlada Boleslav Czech Republic SKODA AUTO a s 2023 Retrieved 23 April 2023 Vaclav Lavicka Nenapadna Skoda je ziskovejsi nez hrda Audi Ostatnim v koncernu muze slouzit za vzor tvrdi nemecky tisk Hospodarske noviny Published on 1 August 2016 Skoda to Make Low Cost Cars for Iran Financial Tribune Published on 27 August 2017 VW Singapore plots Skoda comeback The Straits Times Published on 11 November 2017 Navigator 2017 Archived from the original on 2 December 2017 Archived 2 December 2017 at the Wayback Machine Annual Report 2019 PDF SKODA AUTO COMPANY About SKODA www skoda auto com Retrieved 21 September 2020 Portrait amp Production Plants Volkswagen Group Retrieved 29 January 2017 Skoda Octavia vRS je nejrychlejsim dvoulitrem sveta Skoda Octavia VRS is the fastest two liter in the world in Czech IHNED cz 28 August 2011 Plzenska Skodovka zmenila logo Na sumperskem Parsu se skvi legendarni logo s okridlenym sipem a napis Skoda Sumpersko net Jetschgo Johannes 2019 Skoda A Car That Made History Prague Vitalis p 40 ISBN 9783899196528 Logo Timeline www skoda auto com Retrieved 12 October 2023 General and cited references editMargolius Ivan amp Meisl Charles 1992 Skoda Laurin amp Klement London Osprey ISBN 1 85532 237 4 Jetschgo Johannes 2019 Skoda A Car That Made History Prague Vitalis ISBN 978 3 89919 652 8External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Skoda Auto Official website Skoda Auto s channel on YouTube Skoda storyboard official news of Skoda Auto Carsaddon news of Skoda Auto Skoda Skoda Auto cars and news in Egypt Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Skoda Auto amp oldid 1207030061, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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