AUTOMAKER Stellantis will start to sell electric vehicles (EV) from its Chinese partner Leapmotor in nine European countries from September to expand its offer of budget cars, CEO Carlos Tavares said on Tuesday (May 14).
Sales from the Stellantis-Leapmotor joint-venture will be extended, starting from the fourth quarter of 2024, to South America, Middle East and Africa, and India-Asia-Pacific, Tavares said in Hangzhou, China, where Leapmotor is based.
The JV, called Leapmotor International and 51 per cent-owned by Stellantis, is aimed at selling Leapmotor EVs beyond China and also producing them outside China relying on Stellantis manufacturing footprint.
It is part of a wider partnership between the two groups which saw the Franco-Italian group saying last year it was buying a 21 per cent stake in Leapmotor in a US$1.6 billion deal.
Through the JV, Stellantis has exclusive rights to build, export and sell Leapmotor products outside China, a first for a legacy Western automaker, at a time when a number of Chinese manufacturers, including BYD, Chery and Dongfeng are announcing or assessing new plants in Europe.
Tavares and Leapmotor CEO Zhu Jiangming did not provide details about exactly where Leapmotors EVs could be built in Europe.
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Tavares however said that any decision on manufacturing would be based on cost and quality assesments and that Stellantis’ Tychy’s plant in Poland could be a possibility. REUTERS