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Fiat opens 500L plant in Serbia
Italian automaker spent $1.3 billion to refurbish and equip old Zastava car factory
- April 17, 2012
- News Release
- Metalworking
KRAGUJEVAC, Serbia: Italian carmaker Fiat has opened a production line in Serbia, for its new family version of the popular 500 city car.
Fiat hopes to sell about 160,000 hatchbacks a year produced in the central Serbian town of Kragujevac, which was selected to take advantage of low wages, tax breaks and government subsidies.
The Italian carmaker said the four-door 500L—the L stands for Large—multipurpose vehicle is designed to be “generous” in its size and features, and ecological and simple to drive.
Fiat and Chrysler chief executive Sergio Marchionne, who attended the opening ceremonies for the factory, said the car was set for an autumn launch and was designed to appeal to markets on both sides of the Atlantic. The basic price per car is set to be $21,000.
“This factory is more than a modernized factory,” Marchionne said. “We wanted to turn this region (of Serbia) into a region that will attract more (foreign) investment.”
Fiat and the Serbian government have a 67-33 per cent share respectively in a joint company, Fiat Cars Serbia. Some $1.3 billion was reportedly invested in the refurbishing and equipping of the old Zastava car factory in Kragujevac for the new Fiat production line.
By the end of 2012, the plant will employ 2,400, plus another 1,000 with suppliers, Fiat said. Once fully operational, the plant will have a production capacity of up to 200,000 cars a year.
The old factory in Kragujevac used to produce Yugo—a boxy little model that was considered the worst quality car ever imported in the US during the 1980s.
©The Canadian Press
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