Stellantis to Extend Production Halt at Italy’s Melfi Due to Chip Shortage, Union Says
Published by maria gbaf
Posted on September 1, 2021
1 min readLast updated: February 14, 2026
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Published by maria gbaf
Posted on September 1, 2021
1 min readLast updated: February 14, 2026
Add as preferred source on Google
MILAN (Reuters) – Stellantis will extend by one week to Sept. 13 a planned production stoppage at its Melfi plant in southern Italy due to a global microchip shortage, FIM-CISL union said on Tuesday.
The output freeze at Melfi, one of the carmaker’s largest plants in Italy, comes after Stellantis on Monday said it was extending production halts at several plants in Europe due to a shortage of microchips.
“The company has confirmed to unions that the delay was due to a semiconductor shortage on international markets,” FIM-CISL said in a statement.
Production at Melfi has been stopped since mid-August, including a two-week summer holiday period.
Stellantis reiterated the semiconductor shortage was affecting the whole automotive industry.
“From the beginning of the COVID crisis, we drive our activity daily, plant by plant, by adapting our industrial activity to the automotive market trends, and by taking into account the different situations we are facing,” the carmaker said in a statement.
(Reporting by Giulio Piovaccari, editing by Giselda Vagnoni and Steve Orlofsky)
Stellantis is extending the production halt at its Melfi plant due to a global microchip shortage.
The planned production stoppage at the Melfi plant has been extended by one week to September 13.
The semiconductor shortage is affecting the entire automotive industry, prompting Stellantis to adapt its production activities.
Production at the Melfi plant has been halted since mid-August, including a two-week summer holiday period.
Stellantis confirmed to unions that the delays in production were due to a semiconductor shortage on international markets.
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