Stellantis Eying Gas-Vehicle Production Cuts To Meet Tight EU Emissions Standards

Chris Teague
by Chris Teague

Stellantis is eying production cuts in several of its global markets, but the reasoning is different depending on where you look. In North America, the automaker may cut output to clear unsold dealer inventory, but in Europe, Stellantis may have to slash production numbers to meet increasingly strict emissions rules.


The company’s European COO, Jean-Philippe Imparato, said the cuts could come as soon as November in a push to meet the new regulations that start on January 1, 2025. Companies selling more SUVs and larger vehicles will be impacted more than others, and the consequences for failing to meet the new standards is a 95 euro per excess gram of carbon per vehicle. According to Barclays Bank, that could add up to more than ten billion euros in fines across the industry.


Though the changes in the rules will be a challenge for automakers in Europe, there are no signs that government leaders plan to slow down. Regulations will tighten again in 2030, and by 2035, vehicle fleets must average zero grams of carbon per kilometer, marking the end of gas vehicles on the continent.

Stellantis could refocus its efforts to produce more EVs, but they aren’t flying off dealers’ lots. Despite being more popular and widely available in Europe, EVs make up a small percentage of the overall market, with a 14.7 percent market share in September.


[Images: Stellantis]


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Chris Teague
Chris Teague

Chris grew up in, under, and around cars, but took the long way around to becoming an automotive writer. After a career in technology consulting and a trip through business school, Chris began writing about the automotive industry as a way to reconnect with his passion and get behind the wheel of a new car every week. He focuses on taking complex industry stories and making them digestible by any reader. Just don’t expect him to stay away from high-mileage Porsches.

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  • Jalop1991 Jalop1991 1 hour ago
    "and by 2035, vehicle fleets must average zero grams of carbon per kilometer, marking the end of gas vehicles on the continent."...thus transferring the carbon generation to external factors. American business is really all about transferring stuff--the goodies such as wealth, and the baddies such as carbon--and spinning a narrative around it in order to retain power. Of course, power ultimately resides in the people; only ignoramuses give that power to others, especially a government.
  • Varezhka Varezhka 2 minutes ago
    The 2025 standard of 93.6 g/km CO2 average roughly equates to 66.6 mpg. Granted, this is WLTP test cycle but still… what’s the point of a regulation that no one, even Toyota, can meet? I mean, the only people suffering will be the European automakers and consumers. The Japanese, the Koreans, and the Americans can just sit back and watch while Stellantis and VW go under.
  • Bd2 Not as good as the Hyundai Pony Coupe Vision N 79 by Guigario. Hyundai is willing races across the world with the Elantra N Touring, F1 is next .
  • Jalop1991 Will they make a Paul Walker edition with included tree magnet?
  • Arthur Dailey Looks like a decent vehicle for that market niche. But it is NOT a Mustang. Please Ford, give it a more appropriate name like Galaxy, or Fairlane or even Taurus.
  • TheMrFreeze Not a chance for what they're asking for it (and I actually own an aircooled VW so there's some love in my heart for the company). Make it a real "people's car" (ie: get it down to $30K) and maybe they'll do well with it
  • Aja8888 At his age, I was still running marathons (slowly, however) and was at my ideal weight. Then a hip implant ended running, Now at 81, I walk a lot and still eat right. He looks like HELL in his early 60's. Getting in bad shape is NOT hereditary.
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