Oakville Beaver, 14 Nov 2007, p. 29

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www.oakvillebeaver.com The Oakville Beaver, Wednesday November 14, 2007 - 29 Suzuki at the Tokyo Motor Show 2007 By Rob Beintema OAKVILLE BEAVER This is Tokyo. Home of the heavyweights - Honda, Toyota and Nissan. And also home for one up-and-coming David among the Goliaths ­ Suzuki, a company aiming for a major impact at one of the industry's most important auto shows with a collective showing themed "Small Cars For A Big Future". That's called playing to your strengths. And although it may seem easy for Canadians to shrug off a company still striving for just a one percent market share in this country, Suzuki has become a major player in the rest of the world with its small car specialization a natural fit for developing countries and new world markets in India and the rest of Asia. Even in Japan, Suzuki has led small car sales for the past six years, marketing its boxy WagonR at the rate of over 20,000 purchases per month with exports of the same model increasingly taking hold of European markets. But while Suzuki success may be based on a broad offering of econo models and practicality, it doesn't mean they can't have bigger dreams, incorporating everything from flights of fancy to real world, near future models. After wowing the car world with the Concept Kizashi at the recent 2007 Frankfurt Motor Show, Suzuki unveiled the Concept Kizashi 2 here at the Tokyo Motor Show. Suzuki labels this crossover sports wagon as a "premonition of dynamism and beauty" and while it ethereal qualities caught the eye of all automotive journalists, under the hood, a very real 3.6-litre V6 engine, the highest-displacement engine ever used by Suzuki, is mated to a six-speed automatic for gritty competitive performance. Suzuki is also looking into hybrid/diesel possibilities and we will continue to see this design evolve with a Kizashi 3 sedan concept slated for reveal in Detroit or New York next year. I would expect a production version of this vehicle sometime in 2010 or 2011. Playing with a concept called Sustainable Mobility, Suzuki blends a very futuristic pair of one-person lowspeed PIXY transport devices with the SSC (Suzuki Sharing Coach) base vehicle. Don't hold your breath on this one but it should be noted that many of the manufacturers have turned their attention to one-person transportation technologies that can pay off with at least improved electric wheelchair solutions for aging societies. Continued on Page 30 Suzuki's one-person PIXY concept works in conjunction with an SSC (Suzuki Sharing Coach) base vehicle combining local mobility with longer range transport.

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