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Next generation will revert back to a world model as the original, meaning eligibility for right-hand-drive markets.
Stellantis South Africa has officially confirmed that while it will be bringing the Fiat Strada to markets in Sub-Sahara Africa from this month, South Africa won’t see a return as a result of production being restricted to left-hand-drive.
Next generation will be a world model
In a follow-up statement to the Brazilian-made Strada’s confirmation for the Middle East and African markets on Tuesday evening, Stellantis indicated that Cameroon, Cape Verde, Ghana, Guinea-Conakry, the Ivory Coast, Madagascar, Nigeria and Rwanda will be the sole African countries to receive the Strada and in different unconfirmed engine and spec details.
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Omitted from all SADC countries as a result of the position of the steering gear, Stellantis South Africa confirmed to The Citizen that while this prohibits the Strada from being sold in South Africa, “the next generation will be available in right-hand-drive” and thus certain for a local market return after being withdrawn due to falling sales in 2012.
Officially confirming the next generation Strada as a world model, which the original, introduced in 1998, was billed as along with the model it shared the same platform with, the Palio, the announcement opens the door for Fiat to produce the third generation on local soil at its plant in the Coega Special Economic Zone in the Eastern Cape from 2026.
A facility though rumoured to produce the Peugeot Landtrek in complete knockdown (CKD) form, the automaker has remained mum on confirming the identity of the bakkie it will be producing at the plant located outside Gqeberha, formerly Port Elizabeth, as part of a record R3-billion investment from said year.
Strada’s road in South Africa
Originally powered by a normally aspirated 1.2-litre engine, a free-breathing 1.6 and a low pressure 1.7-litre turbodiesel upon its market debut in 2005, the Strada accounted for a smaller number of sales behind the segment-leading Opel Corsa Utility and later Nissan NP200, before a facelift saw all of the engines make way for a single 1.4.
Available as either a single cab or a cab-and-a-half model called the X-Space Adventure at the time of its market departure, the current second generation, which has amassed total sales of 400 000 units since going on-sale in Brazil three years ago, offers a choice of single and double cab bodystyles and two Firefly petrol/ethanol engines displacing 1.3 and 1.0-litres, the latter supplemented by a turbocharger.
For now, Stellantis South Africa is unlikely to state definitively which bakkie it will be manufacturing this year, however, don’t be surprised if more details do emerge in 2024.
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