If you are under water with your car, will any friendly GM dealer bail you out? Of course. If you live in what was formerly called “East Germany.”
That part of Germany often has to contend with flooding, and this year, it is a bad one. Wide parts are still under water. Some are recovering, but you know what a car is when it had been standing in water for a few days: A write-off.
Now Opel has a great idea: If you have lost your car, any car, due to flooding, simply go to the next Opel dealer, and you can borrow a car there, for up to three weeks, and most unbelievably, for free, writes Automobilwoche [sub]. A simple note from one of the emergency services will suffice as proof. Off you go
Of course, the offer is not being made out of the goodness of the hearts of Opel: People who just lost a car need a new one. Three weeks in a car breeds familiarity. You want to show your appreciation for the good Samaritan. You buy an Opel. The disconcerting part: Opel apparently has so many cars standing around unsold that they can loan them out. They will immediately turn into “used” cars and lose a lot of their value. But anything for a good cause.

Your article suggests that Opel has too many unsold cars sitting on dealer lots but you’ve made no effort to support that with any data.
I’m willing to assume that you are correct and Opel does have too many unsold cars sitting around. The lost value you refer to can be quantified and booked as promotion and marketing expenses. Advertising costs money and I don’t see the problem with Opel spending that money on billboards, magazine ads, TV ads or on a novel demonstrator program that also helps out disaster victims.
This program may or may not result in more car sales, but either way Opel is getting “free” press and building good will, so there is a payoff for whatever value the cars lose.
Well, good will among people other than TTAC writers. It’ll be a cold day in hell before this publication acknowledges a good decision! Yes, sir!
*winning smile*