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Fiat defies virus fears to showcase electric 500 in Milan

- GIULIO PIOVACCARI

MILAN: Fiat Chrysler Automobile­s NV defied fears over Italy’s coronaviru­s outbreak to showcase an electric version of its 500 city car on Wednesday, as it strives to catch up with rivals in low-emissions driving while heading into a merger with Peugeot maker Groupe PSA.

Initially planned for the now-cancelled Geneva Motor Show, the presentati­on was held at an event in Milan — a rarity as large gatherings have been discourage­d by authoritie­s in most of northern Italy, which has seen Europe’s worst virus outbreak.

With schools, universiti­es and museums closed, and cafes forced to shut early for almost two weeks, the mood in Italy’s financial capital is sombre, as it sits just 60 kilometres (37 miles) from the epicentre of the outbreak, where 11 towns are sealed from the outside world.

“We’re here to show that FCA stands close to Milan and to Italy,” Olivier Francois, head of the Fiat brand and FCA chief marketing officer, told a restricted audience of journalist­s, before a press conference at Milan’s design museum, where chairs were placed a metre apart to comply with local authority health requiremen­ts.

“This car does not look at 2020, but to the next decade,” he added.

After the cancellati­on of the Geneva show, most companies have turned to virtual events to present their latest models.

The original 500 small car, launched in the late 1950s and known affectiona­tely as the “Cinquecent­o”, quickly become a symbol of Italian urban design.

The new electric 500 (BEV), which is part of a plan announced in 2018 to invest €5 billion ($5.6 billion) in Italy up to 2021, is the group’s first major step into electric-powered driving.

FCA said the selling price for the cabrio launch version would be €37,900 ($42,330) in Italy, excluding government environmen­tal incentives, though it added cheaper versions would follow.

That compares with a starting price of €16,000 ($17,870) for a petrolengi­ne 500.

Competing electric cars include the Mini Cooper SE with a starting price of €33,900 ($37,858) in Italy and Peugeot’s e-208, starting at €33,600 ($37,523).

“The 500 is not mass market, it’s not the cheapest car in its segment, and so it will continue to be,” Francois said.

An early version of the electric 500 has been produced in the United States to comply with local authority rules on zero-emission cars.

But in 2014 former CEO Sergio

Marchionne asked customers not to buy that car as FCA was losing money on it, and said he hoped to sell the smallest number possible.

With a range of 320 kilometres, the new 500 BEV will be a totally different car, six centimetre­s longer, six centimetre­s wider and two centimetre­s taller that the petrol-engine version. It will be produced at FCA’s Mirafiori plant in Turin.

Sales are expected to start in July, initially in Europe, with FCA hoping to sell 80,000 a year at full capacity.

FCA plans to have 12 electrifie­d vehicles in its fleet by 2021. That includes both hybrid and full electric vehicles, new cars and electrifie­d versions of existing ones, and light commercial vehicles.

The Italian-American automaker earlier this year started selling hybrid versions of the 500 and of its other small car, the Fiat Panda.

Its Jeep brand is also set to start producing hybrid versions of its Renegade and Compass models in the second quarter of this year, while its luxury Maserati brand plans to introduce hybrid and fully electric models this year or next.

 ?? REUTERS ?? New Fiat 500 electric cars are displayed at an event in Milan on Wednesday.
REUTERS New Fiat 500 electric cars are displayed at an event in Milan on Wednesday.

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