Chattanooga Times Free Press

Volkswagen announces plans to manufactur­e a second SUV here

- BY MIKE PARE STAFF WRITER

Volkswagen plans to assemble a second sport utility vehicle in its Chattanoog­a plant as the company races to grow its SUV family and further bolster production and jobs at the factory. VW wants to produce a small five-seat SUV to go with the larger seven-seat Atlas in Chattanoog­a, Hinrich Woebcken, head of Volkswagen’s North American operations, told reporters at the New York Internatio­nal Auto Show on Wednesday.

Bill Kilbride, the Chattanoog­a Area Chamber of Commerce’s chief executive, termed a second Chattanoog­a-made SUV “an important move for a lot of reasons.”

“Anybody who doubts Volkswagen is in this for the long haul should take notice,” he said.

While Woebcken declined to say when assembly of the smaller SUV will start at the plant, which also produces the Passat midsize sedan, The Wall Street Journal said the VW official described the vehicle as a “brother or family member” of the Atlas.

Mike Randle, publisher of Southern Business and Developmen­t magazine, said SUV sales are hot.

“This is SUV country,” he said. “SUV sales are up.”

In the first quarter of 2017, total SUV sales in the United States rose 5.5 percent over year-ago levels, while U.S. car sales fell by 11.5 percent, according to motorintel­ligence.com

While Woebcken didn’t give a timeline on assembly of the second Chattanoog­a-made SUV, Randle expected it would happen “as fast as they can pull it off.”

It’s unclear how much a second SUV would impact employment at the plant, which is adding about 1,100 workers and aiming for a headcount of 3,400 when Atlas production is fully ramped up.

But Kilbride said that more production at the plant helps optimize the equipment.

“When they’re running these lines anything less than capacity, it gets herky-jerky on the hours people are working,” he said.

Kilbride said assembly of a small SUV makes sense for Volkswagen.

“Watching the cars pass over the bridge, you see a lot of five-seat SUVs,” he said.

Michael Harley, an analyst for Kelley Blue Book, said VW wants to make sure it’s “covering all the main bases” with another potential SUV in addition to the Atlas, which is expected to hit dealership­s in about a month.

Because the Atlas is being assembled on VW’s recently installed

“Anybody who doubts Volkswagen is in this for the long haul should take notice.”

– BILL KILBRIDE, CHATTANOOG­A AREA CHAMBER OF COMMERCE CHIEF EXECUTIVE

flexible MQB platform, the auto maker could easily shift to making a smaller SUV alongside the larger one, Harley said.

“They could use existing platforms, power trains,” he said. “It’s just building some sheet metal.”

Last year, VW finished spending $900 million, including more than $600 million in Tennessee, to ready the Chattanoog­a plant to assemble the Atlas.

In addition to the Atlas, VW also is introducin­g a larger, redesigned Tiguan SUV, which is expected to appear at dealership­s this summer.

Volkswagen earlier this year pleaded guilty to three criminal charges for rigging 590,000 diesel-powered vehicles in the U.S. to cheat on diesel emissions tests. Fines, penalties and other costs are expected to top more than $20 billion.

Contact Mike Pare at mpare@timesfreep­ress. com or 423-757-6318.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES / PHOTO ILLUSTRATI­ON BY MATT MCCLANE ?? A second SUV is to be assembled at Chattanoog­a’s VW plant, but the German automaker hasn’t yet revealed what it will look like.
GETTY IMAGES / PHOTO ILLUSTRATI­ON BY MATT MCCLANE A second SUV is to be assembled at Chattanoog­a’s VW plant, but the German automaker hasn’t yet revealed what it will look like.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States