The Phnom Penh Post

Hyundai halts production on disruption of parts supply

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SOUTH Korea’s largest automaker Hyundai Motor confirmed on Tuesday it will suspend all production lines at local plants in phases due to the disruption of parts supplies from China.

The decision follows threehour talks between the labor union and management, and the suspension is expected to last until around Monday.

The production shutdown is due mainly to the inventory shortage of wiring harnesses, which are mostly produced in China. Handmade wiring harnesses need to be laid on the floor of vehicles during their initial assembly. Because every car model uses a different wiring harness, inventorie­s are not usually accumulate­d due to difficulti­es in management, industry watchers said.

A day earlier, Hyundai Motor President Ha Eon-tae said that closing (factories) is “inevitable” due to the “disruption of parts supplies” from China.

One of the two production lines making Genesis vehicles at the Ulsan plant was suspended earlier in the day. The line producing Porter was also suspended in the afternoon.

By Friday, production at a ll five plants in Ulsan will cease operations, while plants in Jeonju and Asan will a lso ta ke time off on Thursday and Friday.

The management and labour union have agreed to a 70 per cent wage payment for workers during the suspension period.

Its sister affiliate Kia Motors, meanwhile, began reducing production at its Hwaseong and Gwangju plants.

SsangYong Motor will also shut down its Pyeongtaek plant from Tuesday for nine days, while Renault Samsung Motors and GM Korea are checking their inventory levels and are considerin­g canceling or delaying overtime.

The prolonged outbreak of China’s coronaviru­s is also posing a threat to Korean tech firms as many of their key factories are located in the country.

LG Display’s plant in Nanjing ceased operations over the weekend. LG Chem also shut down its battery plant in Nanjing, polarizer plants in Beijing and Guangzhou, and the automotive materials plant in Tianjin. SK Innovation too has suspended production lines in its Changzhou battery assembly plant.

“Stocks were secured for the Lunar New Year holiday, but supply will be tight if it turns into a prolonged outbreak,” SK Innovation said.

LG Chem said it is preparing and implementi­ng detailed emergency plans “to minimize management risks”.

The nation’s two largest chipmakers, Samsung Electronic­s and SK hynix, are operating their factories with minimum personnel during the Lunar New Year holiday – which has been extended until February 9 in China.

Samsung’s plant is located in Xian, about 700km from Wuhan, the epicenter of the new coronaviru­s outbreak. SK hynix has production lines in Wuxi and Chongqing, about 600 to 800km away from the city.

Samsung said its factories are currently fully functional. Noting, “We will look closely at the situation and are considerin­g various options.”

An SK hynix official said during an earnings conference call on Friday that the company is preparing a contingenc­y plan because it cannot “rule out the possibilit­y of the operations being affected” if the situation is prolonged.

“The industries with long tails in the supply chain, such as automobile­s and informatio­n technology, will suffer first. But, other manufactur­ing sectors may also gradually see disruption in their supply chains because almost everything is produced in China,” said Chung In-kyo, a professor at Inha University.

 ?? AFP ?? The production shutdown is due mainly to the inventory shortage of wiring harnesses, which are mostly produced in China. the suspension is expected to last until around Monday.
AFP The production shutdown is due mainly to the inventory shortage of wiring harnesses, which are mostly produced in China. the suspension is expected to last until around Monday.

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