Italy is open to buying a stake in car maker Stellantis STLA-N, Industry Minister Adolfo Urso said on Thursday, as he set out plans to provide €950-million ($1-billion) in subsidies this year to help drivers switch to cleaner cars.
The new incentive scheme follows a clash between Italy’s rightist government and Fiat-owner Stellantis, led by Chief Executive Carlos Tavares, over production levels in the country.
Urso said that Stellantis had committed to boosting production in Italy back to the million vehicle level, a figure last hit in 2017. The total last year was around 750,000.
He went on to suggest that Italy could match the French government by taking a stake in the car maker, whose other brands include Peugeot and Jeep.
“If Tavares maintains that Italy needs to do the same as France, which has boosted its active investment in Stellantis, then they can ask. We can discuss it together,” Urso told reporters on Thursday.
Stellantis declined to comment.
France holds a 6 per cent stake in Stellantis, the group formed in 2021 through the merger of Fiat Chrysler and France’s PSA Group. Italy’s Agnelli family is the single largest investor in Stellantis through its Exor vehicle.
Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni said last week that Stellantis – which also has major businesses in France and America – had sometimes acted against the national interest.
As an opposition politician, Urso had in the past called for state lender Cassa Depositi e Prestiti (CDP) to buy a stake in Stellantis.
Last June, Stellantis Chairman John Elkann said his company did not need to add the Italian state to its shareholders.
The group has said the one million output target in Italy depends on several factors, including Italy spending more on incentives, the development of an EV recharging network and lower energy costs.
SUBSIDY SCHEME
The measures announced on Thursday will help Italy to renew what is one of the oldest car fleets in Europe.
Rome will provide up to €13,750 in subsidies for the lowest earners to help them buy a new fully-electric vehicle costing up to €35,000 excluding VAT. Part of the subsidy is linked to scrapping an existing polluting combustion-engine car.
The same income group can also get a subsidy of up to €10,000 for a new plug-in hybrid costing up to €45,000.
State-of-the art combustion engine vehicles will qualify for subsidies as well, though they will be smaller.
The incentives, which had been expected for months, are more generous than those they replace, which amounted to up to €5,000 for electric vehicles.
The outlay is part of a wider multiyear program, worth over €8-billion, that Italy announced in 2022 to support its car industry.
Urso said Rome could channel public resources from next year directly to new production plants in Italy should incentives continue to mainly fund cars made in foreign factories.
Davide Mele, head of corporate affairs for Stellantis Italy, said the package should help support the domestic car industry.
“We make cars based on consumer demand … That’s why it is fundamental to stimulate demand with cars at affordable prices,” he told the meeting with government officials and unions.