Fiat announced this week that it plans to invest 3 billion Real (approx. 1.7 billion USD) to build a second plant in Brazil, the carmaker’s No. 2 market after its native Italy.
The new factory will be located in the industrial complex in Suape, a port in the north-eastern state of Pernambuco, Brazilian President Lula da Silva and Fiat executive Cledorvino Bellini said at a ceremony in Salgueiro, Pernambuco.
The facility will employ up to 3,500 people to turn out 200,000 vehicles per year, according to the state government, which said Fiat’s “strategic investment” will also spur industrialization in Pernambuco.
Besides the assembly plant, Fiat plans a research and development centre at the site and may also establish a training facility.
“We are living today something historic for Brazil and for the northeast,” said Lula da Silva, who was born in impoverished Pernambuco, while Bellini said the plant in Suape is part of Fiat’s plan to invest 6 billion US dollars in its Brazilian operations between now and 2014.
The factory’s output is intended both for the Brazilian market and for export to other countries in Latin America, according to a statement from Fiat, which already produces cars in the south-eastern Brazilian state of Minas Gerais.
Precisely in the state of Minas Gerais Fiat plans to increase production by 150,000 cars per year, the press office said. That factory produces 800,000 cars a year.
Fiat has been making cars in Brazil since 1976, producing mostly for the domestic market.
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