Carmakers look to resume China output after virus forced closures


SINGAPORE: Automakers including Daimler, Ford and Tesla are looking to resume production in China after being forced to shut factories following the outbreak of a new coronavirus.

Below are details on carmakers’ plans (in alphabetical order):

>BMW’s China venture with Brilliance said on Feb 5 the Chinese firm planned to restart production on Feb 17.

>Daimler said on Feb 3 it plans to resume passenger car production in Beijing on Feb 10.
>Fiat Chrysler said on Feb 6 that disruption to parts supplies could threaten production at one of its European plants within two to four weeks.

>Ford Motor said on Jan 29 it planned to resume production on Feb 10 at its factories in Chongqing and Hangzhou with joint venture partner Chongqing Changan Automobile.

>General Motors said on Feb 10 it plans to restart production in China on Feb 15.

>Honda said on Feb 7 it would restart its three plants in Wuhan, which it operates with Dongfeng Motor Group, on Feb 13. Honda said there were no supply chain issues that would impede production.

>Hyundai Motor and sister firm Kia Motors will gradually increase production in South Korea from Feb 11, the companies said in a statement on Feb 10.

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>Nissan Motor will temporarily halt production at its plant in Kyushu, southern Japan, the Nikkei newspaper reported on Feb 10. Nissan said on Feb 4 it was considering restarting production at its Chinese venture with Dongfeng sometime after Feb 10 while output from Hubei would start after Feb 14.

>PSA Peugeot Citroen, which ismerging with Fiat, said on Jan 31 its three plants in Wuhan will remain closed until Feb 14.

>Renault said on Feb 7 that its South Korean unit RSM would suspend production at its Busan site for four days from Feb 11 due to supply chain disruptions.

>Suzuki Motor Corp said on Feb 7 that it was considering sourcing vehicle components from outside China because the outbreak was threatening to disrupt vehicle production in its biggest market, India.

>Tesla’s factory in Shanghai will resume production on Feb 10 with assistance to cope with the outbreak, a Shanghai government official said on Feb 8.

>Toyota Motor on Feb 7 extended the shutdown of its China factories to Feb 16 from Feb 9. The Japanese automaker operates 12 car and parts factories in regions such as the northern city of Tianjin and the southern province of Guangdong.

>French car parts maker Valeo said on Jan 31 its three sites in Wuhan will remain shut until at least Feb 13.

>Volkswagen said on Feb 8 that it has postponed restarting production at most plants at its Chinese JV with SAIC Motor and the Tianjin plant of its JV with FAW Group until Feb 17. One plant it operates with SAIC in Shanghai and most of the plants in the FAW JV will restart on Feb 10.
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