Stellantis and Dongfeng have confirmed their joint venture factory will begin producing “new energy” Peugeot and Jeep models from 2027 both for China and “export to global markets”.

In a statement released over the weekend, the automakers announced the existing Dongfeng Peugeot-Citroen joint venture plant in Wuhan will produce two “Peugeot-branded” models from 2027. The design of these two vehicles will be based on the Concept 6 and Concept 8 SUV revealed at the recent Beijing motor show.

Both concept cars are on the large side, and if exported back to Europe would help the brand flesh out the top-end of its lineup, which currently tops out with the 4.79m-long 5008 SUV.

The Wuhan factory will also produce two “Jeep-branded” vehicles from 2027. It’s unknown if Wuhan will manufacture existing Jeep models, or something new.

We also don’t know if the two Peugeot and Jeep models confirmed in this announcement will be based on Stellantis or Dongfeng architectures. Nor have the partners indicated which global markets the new cars will be exported to. Currently Australian-market Peugeots come from Europe, while local Jeeps are sources from Europe and North America.

All four vehicles will be “new energy vehicles”, which is a China-specific phrase encompassing plug-in hybrids, range extended EVs, and pure EVs.

The partners will invest around €1 billion (A$1.6bn) to produce these four new cars, with Stellantis only contributing about €130 million (A$211 million).

Last month a report indicated Stellantis will look to focus on four key global brands (Peugeot, Fiat, Jeep and Ram), with its other marques being relegated to regional roles.