94-5774. Bugatti Automobili, S.p.A.; Grant of Petition for Temporary Exemption From Standard No. 208  

  • [Federal Register Volume 59, Number 48 (Friday, March 11, 1994)]
    [Unknown Section]
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    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 94-5774]
    
    
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    [Federal Register: March 11, 1994]
    
    
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    DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
    [Docket No. 93-77; Notice 2]
    
     
    
    Bugatti Automobili, S.p.A.; Grant of Petition for Temporary 
    Exemption From Standard No. 208
    
        Bugatti Automobili, S.p.A., of Modena, Italy, petitioned for a 
    temporary exemption until November 1, 1995, from the automatic 
    protection requirements of Federal Motor Vehicle Safety Standard No. 
    208, Occupant Crash Protection. The basis of the petition was that 
    compliance would cause substantial economic hardship.
        Notice of receipt of the petition was published on December 10, 
    1993, and an opportunity afforded for comment (58 FR 65008). This 
    notice grants Bugatti's petition.
    
    Petitioner's Hardship Arguments
    
        Under 15 U.S.C. 1410(a)(1)(A), section 123(a)(1)(A) of the National 
    Traffic and Motor Vehicle Safety Act (the Act), the Administrator may 
    provide a temporary exemption upon a finding that ``compliance would 
    cause substantial economic hardship and that the manufacturer has, in 
    good faith, attempted to comply * * *.''
        The following is a summary of Bugatti's petition. Bugatti was 
    formed as an Italian corporation in 1987 for the purpose of 
    manufacturing automobiles. It is 80.66% owned by Bugatti International 
    Holding, S.A., a Luxembourg corporation, which between 1987 and 1994 
    will have invested in excess of $115,000,000 in facilities, personnel, 
    research and development. Four years after its founding in 1991, 
    Bugatti presented a prototype vehicle to the public. The factory was 
    completed in 1992. Production of its first model, the EB 110, began in 
    April 1993. As of the date of Bugatti's petition, ``fewer than 50 cars 
    have been produced.'' As the company only began realizing income with 
    the commencement of sales in 1993, its cumulative net losses from 1987 
    through the latest fiscal year preceding the filing of its petition 
    exceed $30,000,000.
        In its early years, the company's focus was to establish itself and 
    to commence sales in markets other than the United States. The 
    company's permanent management team was not in place until 1991, and 
    its permanent engineering team was finalized only in 1993. Initially, 
    it ``seriously considered not even coming to the US at all'' because of 
    ``product liability exposure and insurance, homologation costs, and the 
    often volatile nature of the high performance/exotic car market in the 
    United States.'' In the spring of 1993, however, it made the decision 
    to enter the U.S. market and intends to do so in mid-1994. Because of 
    the requirement in the Intermodal Surface Transportation Act of 1991 
    mandating the phase-in of airbags beginning in September 1996, the 
    company decided not to develop an automatic belt system but, instead, 
    to provide an air bag system from the beginning as a means of complying 
    with Standard No. 208.
        Lacking the in-house engineering staff capable of developing an air 
    bag system, and concurrently with its decision to enter the U.S. 
    market, Bugatti began a search to locate an ``engineering design and 
    development firm to manage Bugatti's air bag project.'' Fourteen 
    companies were approached. In September 1993, the proposal by Lotus 
    Engineering was accepted. The cost set forth in the proposal is ``in 
    excess of $1.2 million (not including the cost of the vehicles to be 
    crashed).'' The company anticipates that it will be able to commence 
    production of air bag equipped vehicles in April 1995, well before the 
    end of the 2-year exemption it has requested.
        Late in August 1993, Bugatti International Holding, signed a 
    contract to purchase Group Lotus plc, including Lotus Engineering. 
    Lotus is also a manufacturer of motor vehicles, whose production in 
    1992 was 688 units. According to the petitioner, Lotus ``lost over $35 
    million in 1992 on revenues of approximately $92 million.'' The 
    purchase of Lotus would be financed by capital investments into Bugatti 
    International Holding earmarked for that specific purpose.
        In the absence of an exemption, the company projects continuing net 
    losses through 1994.
    
    Arguments Why An Exemption Would Be in the Public Interest and 
    Consistent With Traffic Safety Objectives
    
        In order to grant an exemption, the Administrator must also find 
    that the exemption is in the public interest and consistent with the 
    objectives of the Act. In support of its petition, Bugatti informed 
    NHTSA that it ``will make every effort possible to design its air bag 
    system so that it can retrofit with air bags all vehicles sold under 
    the exemption.'' It also argued that it does not expect to sell more 
    than 100 cars under the exemption. Each car, equipped with a three-
    point belt system, would be labeled with a seat belt use reminder. 
    Further, all vehicles will meet all other Federal motor vehicle safety 
    standards including amended Standard No. 214 Side Impact Protection in 
    advance of the requirement to do so.
        No comments were received on the petition.
        The primary finding that must be made by the agency with regard to 
    Bugatti in order to grant its petition is that ``compliance would cause 
    substantial economic hardship'' (15 U.S.C. 1410(a)(1)(A)). The phrase 
    ``substantial economic hardship'' is undefined, and there is scant 
    legislative history to provide an interpretation of these words. The 
    purpose that was cited on the House floor while the legislation was 
    pending was the need to protect the ability of a small U.S. 
    manufacturer to ``continue production of its automobiles while it 
    tooled to adapt the new safety equipment, which it purchases from big 
    automobile manufacturers, to its own automobiles.'' (Remarks of Rep. 
    Springer, Congressional Record, October 13, 1973, 38047 and 38048). 
    Thus, to require immediate compliance of the manufacturer in question 
    would have resulted in a cessation of production until compliance was 
    achieved. The obvious result of cessation of production is an eventual 
    cessation of sales and generation of revenue. In other words, the 
    hardship example cited by Rep. Springer is directly related to the 
    effect of a denial upon a small manufacturer's present income.
        In implementing the statutory provision, NHTSA requires a 
    petitioner to file corporate balance sheets and financial statements 
    for the past three fiscal years (49 CFR 555.6(a)(1)(iv)), and a 
    projected balance sheet and financial statement for the year following 
    any denial of a petition (49 CFR 555.6(a)(1)(v)). A petitioner is also 
    offered an opportunity to discuss ``any other hardships (e.g., loss of 
    market) that the petitioner desires the agency to consider.'' (49 CFR 
    555.6(a)(1)(vi)).
        The touchstone that NHTSA has used in determining the existence of 
    substantial economic hardship is an applicant's financial health as 
    indicated by its income statements. NHTSA has tended to consider a 
    continuing and cumulative net loss position as evidence per se of 
    hardship. See, e.g., Ferrari, Docket No. EX89-5 (55 FR at 3786); 
    Maserati, Docket No. EX88-2 (53 FR at 34630). The theory behind NHTSA's 
    rationale is that, if a company with a continuing net loss is required 
    to divert its limited resources to resolve a compliance problem on an 
    immediate basis, it may be unable to use those resources to solve other 
    problems that may affect its viability. The agency has considered this 
    especially important in its treatment of corporate petitioners during 
    their infancy.
        NHTSA has considered all these foregoing factors in the finding 
    that it has reached with respect to Bugatti. The petitioner's income 
    statements indicate the company's cumulative net losses to date of 
    $30,000,000. Under ordinary circumstances, that fact ought to enable 
    the Administrator to conclude that the company has made a persuasive 
    hardship argument. Yet there are other factors here which must be 
    weighed in reaching a decision that is consistent with the hardship 
    legislation as NHTSA interprets it. The most important of these factors 
    is the effect of a denial upon the company. A denial will not force the 
    company to terminate production until compliance with Standard No. 208 
    is achieved, because the United States is only one of a number of 
    markets that the company is pursuing. A denial will not result in the 
    withdrawal of funds by investors as completion of a total of 
    $115,000,000 investment is scheduled for the current year. A denial 
    will not result in loss of market in the United States or create 
    hardship for its dealers here because the company has not yet imported 
    vehicles for sale through a franchised dealer network. The primary 
    recognizable effect of a denial is that the company will be unable to 
    introduce itself to the American market until if fields a fully 
    complying car. According to the petition, it anticipates that 
    compliance will be achieved during April 1995, approximately 9 months 
    after it would have begun importation of an exempted vehicle. Given the 
    nature of the EB110, it appears that sales which would otherwise have 
    occurred during this period will only be deferred rather than lost.
        In search of a rationale for an affirmative finding of hardship, 
    NHTSA returns to the criterion implicit in Rep. Springer's example, the 
    effect of a denial upon present income. The effect of a denial, 
    according to Bugatti, is that it will experience a net loss of 
    $2,000,000 rather than the $10,000,000 profit projected with the 
    exemption in place. Thus, a denial would have a potential $12,000,000 
    impact upon the company, contributing to an increase, rather than a 
    decrease, in the cumulative net loss figure of $30,000,000. Even though 
    the profits might eventually be realized with the sale of conforming 
    cars were the petition denied, the delayed profits will have the effect 
    of deferring down the line the additional profits that would be 
    realized, and will not affect the net losses attributable to a denial. 
    This has an impact upon the company's cash flow situation. NHTSA has 
    been given to understand that the petitioner has been able to sell only 
    approximately 30 vehicles as of mid-January 1994 because of the 
    economic situation in Europe, and that this is below the sales that had 
    been projected for the EB 110. Thus, it is the effect that a denial 
    would have upon current income that NHTSA believes would create 
    substantial economic hardship. This situation is to be contrasted with 
    the agency's denial of a similar petition by Ferrari where the effect 
    of the agency action was to reduce anticipated profits from $20,000,000 
    to $10,000,000, and no loss of cumulative loss position existed (55 FR 
    3785).
        With respect to the company's good faith efforts to meet Standard 
    No. 208, the company has argued that it did not commit itself to 
    entering the American market until early 1993. While it might be 
    assumed that a motor vehicle would not be designed today without the 
    American market in mind, the United States is not invariably attractive 
    to small manufacturers. The EB 110 appears to be one of a number of 
    expensive, high performance vehicles that have been developed with no 
    original intention of sale in the United States. Examples of such 
    vehicles include Britain's Jaguar XJ220, McLaren, and Lister. Accepting 
    the petitioner's statement that the decision to offer the vehicle for 
    sale in the United States was not made until 1993, the agency is led by 
    the solicitations and decisions reached in the period preceding the 
    filing of the petition, and Bugatti's anticipated ability to comply by 
    April 1995 to conclude that the petitioner has made a good faith effort 
    to meet the automatic restraint requirements of Standard No. 208.
        The agency must also find that an exemption is in the public 
    interest and consistent with the objectives of the Safety Act. In 
    providing the authority to establish safety standards, Congress 
    expressed its intent that the public continue to be afforded a wide 
    choice of motor vehicles. The agency is cognizant that granting the 
    petition would not appear to have a discernible impact upon safety. 
    Bugatti now anticipates that, at the most, about 50 vehicles would not 
    be provided with automatic restraints. Further, it is actively pursuing 
    the possibility that these could be retrofitted to comply with driver 
    airbags.
        For the reasons expressed above, it is hereby found that to require 
    Bugatti to comply with Standard No. 208 would create substantial 
    economic hardship, and that the petitioner has made a good faith effort 
    to comply with the standard. It is further found that an exemption for 
    Bugatti would be in the public interest and consistent with the 
    objectives of the Act. Accordingly, Bugatti Automobili S.p.A. is hereby 
    granted NHTSA Exemption No. 94-1 from paragraph S4.1.4 of 49 CFR 
    571.208 Motor Vehicle Safety Standard No. 208 Occupant Crash 
    Protection, expiring November 1, 1995.
    
        Authority: 15 U.S.C. 1410; delegation of authority at 49 CFR 
    1.40.
    
        Issued on: March 8, 1994.
    
    Christopher A. Hart,
    Deputy Administrator.
    [FR Doc. 94-5774 Filed 3-10-94; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 4917-59-M
    
    
    

Document Information

Published:
03/11/1994
Department:
Transportation Department
Entry Type:
Uncategorized Document
Document Number:
94-5774
Pages:
0-0 (1 pages)
Docket Numbers:
Federal Register: March 11, 1994, Docket No. 93-77, Notice 2