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Since 1990, several foreign companies, including Mercedes, Audi, Hyundai, Volvo, Toyota, and Peugeot, expressed interest in opening branch plants in Romania. [2] In 2014, the Romanian automotive industry ranks fifth in Central and Eastern Europe, behind that of the Czech Republic, Slovakia, and Poland.
Ford Otosan Romania SRL, commonly referred to as Ford Romania, is an automobile manufacturing company operated by Ford Otosan, located in Craiova, Romania. [4] The company was established in 2008 after Ford's purchase of Daewoo Automobile Romania. In 2022, the Ford Romania company was purchased by Ford Otosan and changed its name to Ford Otosan ...
Location of Romania. Romania is a sovereign state located in Southeastern Europe. Following rapid economic growth in the early 2000s, Romania has an economy predominantly based on services, and is a producer and net exporter of machines and electric energy, featuring companies like Automobile Dacia and OMV Petrom.
As of April 2023, there were around 40,000 electric vehicles (including plug-in hybrid vehicles) in Romania, equivalent to 0.5% of all cars in the country. [2] As of March 2023 [update] , 8.6% of new cars registered in Romania were fully electric , and 3.4% were plug-in hybrid.
These cars are eagerly prized by Dacia enthusiasts, and Dacia web forums are full of evidence about the rarities and oddities produced by Dacia during the 1980s. The Maxi Break was an eight-seater version of the station wagon (also available as an ambulance), stretched by about a half a metre between the doors. 10–12 such cars were actually ...
Romanian license plate issued from 2007 European Union stripe, known as a "Euroband". The most common format for vehicle registration plates in Romania consists of black letters on white background in the format CC 12 ABC, where CC is a two letter county code, 12 is a two digit group, and ABC is a three letter group.
Speed Limits in Romania based on road type and vehicle category as of July 2023. The speed limit in localities is set at 50 km/h, but the owner of the road (usually the state) can apply for permission [to whom?] to raise it up to 80 km/h for automobiles and motorcycles or decrease it as low as 10 km/h for tramways and 30 km/h for automobiles.
Cover, first, and last pages of the Romanian driver's licence between the 1970s and the 1990s. The R code indicates an issuing before 1981. In Romania, the driving licence (Romanian: Permis de conducere) is a governmental right given to those who request a licence for any of the categories they desire.