As Fiat stalls, Italy's Turin struggles to stave off decline

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By Alvise Armellini

TURIN, Italy (Reuters) - The Italian city of Turin, home to Europe's oldest car factory, typifies the industrial decay that parts of the continent face as its automakers struggle with the cost of electrification, low demand, and competition from China.

Located at the foot of the Alps in north-west Italy, Turin is where Fiat, now part of multinational Stellantis, was co-founded by the Agnelli family 125 years ago. Now it is grappling with the decline of its once dominant industry, evident in the state of its historic Mirafiori plant.

The factory makes the Fiat 500 electric city car and two Maserati sports cars, but due to low demand, production has been suspended for large parts of the year and 2,800 workers are on furlough on reduced pay.

"Mirafiori has already been closed. It's just that it reopens sometimes," says Giacomo Zulianello, a plant worker and FIOM Cgil trade union official who is among those laid off until the start of November.

To survive, Fiat allowed its Italian identity to become diluted as it took over and then merged with Chrysler in 2014, creating Fiat Chrysler Automobiles (FCA), and joined with Peugeot maker PSA to form Stellantis in 2021.

Meanwhile, Turin lost four of its car plants over the last four decades, starting with Lingotto in 1982 - famous for the rooftop test track that features in the classic 1960s British film "The Italian Job" - and ending last year with Grugliasco.

Mirafiori - once the symbol of Fiat's might, employing around 60,000 people and churning out as many as 1 million cars a year including the original Fiat 500 in its 1960s heyday - has shrivelled to a shadow of its former self.

"There is a taboo word here in Turin, which is 'decline' ... we can call it what we want... but it is a fairly incontrovertible fact," says Luca Davico, an urban sociologist at Turin's Polytechnic.

Around 2.2 million people live in Turin and its suburbs.

The city has attempted to reinvent itself as a tourism destination touting its elegant centre, top museums and food, and proximity to the Alps, as well as a knowledge hub, with more than a dozen universities and academies.

It also hosts a thriving aerospace industry and Juventus, Italy's most successful soccer club.

However, with as many as 50,000 to 60,000 jobs in the area still tied to the car industry, the mood is bleak as Stellantis workers prepare for a national strike and a march in Rome on Friday to press the government and the company to safeguard jobs.

LAST PLANT STANDING