Italian Government Threatens to Pull Public Funds if Stellantis Doesn't Follow Through On Planned Battery Factory

Chris Teague
by Chris Teague

The Italian government has given Stellantis hundreds of millions of dollars to build a battery plant, but the country may pull that funding if the automaker doesn’t firmly commit to the project. It warned that it would move funds elsewhere if the company isn’t willing or able to follow through on its promise to build the facility, but the joint venture between Stellantis and others delayed the factory and others earlier this year.


Italian industry minister Adolfo Urso said, “Stellantis must give us a reply, and it must do so shortly. If Stellantis does not give us a positive feedback within hours, we’ll move the funds elsewhere. We can’t afford to lose these funds because Stellantis is not sticking to its commitments. The government did its part, the company did not.”


To be fair, the Stellantis partnership group hasn’t killed the project. Its announcement earlier this year stated that it would revise its plans for sites in Italy and Germany “to introduce a new technology for the production of cells and modules, to be in line with the evolution of the market.”

Italy has been at odds with Stellantis for a while. Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni has pushed the automaker to focus more on the Italian market, forcing it to remove the country’s flag from vehicles made in Morocco and heavily criticizing the merger between France’s PSA and Fiat-Chrysler, which formed Stellantis back in 2021.


[Images: Stellantis]


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Chris Teague
Chris Teague

Chris grew up in, under, and around cars, but took the long way around to becoming an automotive writer. After a career in technology consulting and a trip through business school, Chris began writing about the automotive industry as a way to reconnect with his passion and get behind the wheel of a new car every week. He focuses on taking complex industry stories and making them digestible by any reader. Just don’t expect him to stay away from high-mileage Porsches.

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5 of 11 comments
  • ToolGuy ToolGuy on Aug 23, 2024
    When I need batteries I go to the store and buy batteries. (I have a friend who orders them online, but personally I get very nervous with internet payment schemes, and also phones without dials.) Anyway, the point is, I don't make my own batteries, I purchase them. Why would a car company build a battery factory? Is Stellantis a car company or a battery manufacturer? Do they know? Do you know? (I know I don't know.) There are good honest hardworking Americans (and Italians) going to work every day to make batteries, and they never asked Stellantis the car company to come and take their jobs away, did they? Hopefully the Harris-Walz-Emhoff-Walz Administration can fix this situation. Otherwise, what is next -- airplane companies building rockets?? Back in my day, people stayed in their lane (and when they didn't we went to Europe and showed them where things stand).
    • See 1 previous
    • VoGhost VoGhost on Aug 26, 2024
      You want industrial policy modeled on your buying habits?
  • EBFlex EBFlex on Aug 26, 2024
    Proof all governments are awful. “Build what we tell you or we turn off the tap”
    • SCE to AUX SCE to AUX on Aug 26, 2024
      It Stellantis' fault for accepting government money to begin with, starting in France (6% ownership), and soon in Italy. The check writer wants a return on investment. Accept money from the Man, and the Man calls the shots.
  • Namesakeone It should be a name that evoques the wild west, that emphasizes the go-anywhere nature of how an SUV should be used. Something like a wild animal, maybe something like a horse. I've got it! How about . . . Mustang! Oh, wait. They already did that, didn't they?
  • Slavuta There Used to be Pontiac Trans Sport.... That "Trans Sport" part has a totally new meaning these days
  • 210delray You need to change the headline -- it's a 2025 model.
  • Jeff How about Aspire for a new subcompact crossover from Ford because it aspires to be bigger and its buyers would aspire for a better vehicle if they could afford it.
  • Jeff Carlos Travares wants to cut costs by 1/3. I don't see Chrysler or Dodge surviving too much longer especially since they are being literally starved for product. The success of the new Charger could extend Dodge a few more years but a failure might be a quick end to Dodge. I could see Stellantis moving more manufacturing for Jeep and Ram to Mexico which I believe will eventually be the only surviving brands of the old Chrysler. As for the Durango if it continues it will not be for too many more years it is an outdated product that I doubt will be redesigned especially when Jeep has a comparable product. Stellantis needs to address the high dealer inventory level by giving better incentives and low interest rates to clear excessive inventory.
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