Stellantis’ output in Italy is set to drop below 500,000 vehicles this year from 751,000 in 2023

Automaker Stellantis’ output in Italy is set to drop below 500,000 vehicles this year from 751,000 in 2023, the FIM-CISL union said on Wednesday, citing persistently soft market demand, especially for electric vehicles.

The projection signals an output level well below the target that Stellantis, whose brands include Fiat and Alfa Romeo, is discussing with the Italian government, of one million vehicles – for both passenger cars and vans – by the end of this decade, reports Reuters.

The data reinforced fears of structural overcapacity in Europe for local automakers amid mounting pressures from Asian rivals. The region’s top manufacturer Volkswagen last month announced it could close factories in Germany for the first time.

“If the trend seen in the third quarter was to be confirmed in the last quarter of the year, the production (situation) would become even more serious,” with fewer than 300,000 cars and some 200,000 vans produced, FIM-CISL’s head Ferdinando Uliano said.

Stellantis said in a statement that the automotive market faced a complicated situation which, in Italy in particular, was made worse by elements including high energy and labour costs. A broad rethinking of the country’s industrial policies was key to achieving proposed results, it added. Carlos Tavares, the company CEO, is due to address an Italian parliamentary committee at the end of next week on production in Italy.

Uliano, who was presenting the union’s quarterly report on the automaker’s output in the country, said production volumes were not helped by delays in the government’s new purchase incentive scheme, which was announced at the beginning of this year but introduced only in June.

“We think that the lack of incentives in other European countries has had a negative impact,” he said.

All six Stellantis factories in Italy saw output decline in the first nine months of the year, with an overall 41% drop to 387,600 vehicles, FIM-CISL said.

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