Automobile Dacia
Romanian car manufacturer / From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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S.C. Automobile Dacia S.A.,[5] commonly known as Dacia (Romanian pronunciation: [ˈdatʃi.a] ⓘ), is a Romanian car manufacturer that takes its name from the historical region that constitutes present-day Romania. The company was established in 1966. In 1999, after 33 years, the Romanian government sold Dacia to the French car manufacturer Groupe Renault. It is Romania's largest company by revenue[6] and the largest exporter, constituting 8% of the country's total exports in 2018.[7] In 2021, the Dacia marque sold 537,074 passenger and commercial vehicles.[8]
Company type | Subsidiary |
---|---|
Industry | Automotive |
Founded | September 1966; 57 years ago (1966-09) |
Headquarters | Bucharest, Bucharest-Ilfov Mioveni, Argeș, Romania |
Area served | Europe (except Armenia, Azerbaijan, Belarus, Georgia, Russia, Ukraine), Algeria, Israel,[1] Lebanon,[2] Morocco, Overseas France and Tunisia[3] |
Key people |
|
Products | Automobiles, commercial vehicles |
Production output | 314,228 (2022)[4][nb 1] |
Revenue | 25,709 million lei (2022)[4] |
650 million lei (2022)[4] | |
527 million lei (2022)[4] | |
Total assets | 9,247 million lei (2022)[4] |
Total equity | 4,241 million lei (2022)[4] |
Number of employees | 12,209 (2022)[4] |
Parent | Renault |
Website | dacia |
From January 2021 onwards the Dacia company became part of Renault's Dacia-Lada business unit. In May 2022, Renault sold Lada's parent company AvtoVAZ to Russian state-owned institute NAMI.