Bangkok Post

Ford to move production of Focus and C-Max cars out of Michigan

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DETROIT: Ford Motor Co will move production of its Focus small cars and C-Max hybrids from its Michigan Assembly Plant near Detroit in 2018, highlighti­ng difficulti­es US automakers are having building fuel-efficient vehicles profitably at home.

The announceme­nt casts doubt on the future of one of Ford’s largest US factories and comes just days before executives and leaders of the United Auto Workers formally kick off talks toward a new labour agreement.

The UAW is expected to push for wage increases and fight company proposals to scale back healthcare costs.

Ford did not say where it would build the next-generation Focus and C-Max for the US market. But less than three months ago, the company said it would spend $2.5 billion on engine and transmissi­on plants in Mexico.

Ford has assembly plants in Mexico that make Fusion mid-sized sedans and Fiesta small cars.

Spokeswoma­n Kristina Adamski said the company must make production decisions that allow it to remain competitiv­e.

“We actively are pursuing future vehicle alternativ­es to produce at Michigan Assembly and will discuss this issue with United Auto Workers leadership as part of the upcoming negotiatio­ns,” she said.

Ford, like crosstown rivals General Motors Co and Fiat Chrysler Automobile­s, got support from the US government to build fuel-efficient vehicles in US plants.

Michigan Assembly in Wayne was among 13 Ford factories that benefited from a $5.9 billion loan from the US Department of Energy in 2009.

Ford has paid back $1.8 billion of that loan meant to spur developmen­t of fueleffici­ent cars.

Jimmy Settles, the union’s chief liaison and negotiator with Ford, said in a statement: “We are extremely confident that a new product commitment will be secured during the upcoming 2015 negotiatio­ns and that the Michigan Assembly Plant will maintain a full production schedule.”

US first-half sales were down 3% for the Focus and 17% for the C-Max.

In April, Ford announced that it would cut a shift at the Michigan Assembly Plant and lay off 700 workers.

GM has said it is laying off 260 workers and cutting production at the Detroit-area Orion Assembly plant where it makes the Chevrolet Sonic.

Although GM announced 100 of those lay-offs in June, it said later that month that it would spend $245 million at the Orion plant and add 300 jobs to produce a new car there, without specifying what that car will be.

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