Houston Chronicle

Automakers to restart in first week of May

- By Chester Dawson, Gabrielle Coppola, Keith Naughton and David Welch

Automakers are cautiously coalescing around plans to reopen North American assembly plants early next month following what will be a roughly six-week shutdown for virtually the entire industry.

Toyota Motor Corp., Tesla Inc., Hyundai Motor Co. and Volkswagen AG are among the major automakers that have said they intend to resume production in the first week of May. Even if they stick to that schedule, many won’t restart all their factories at once, and the facilities that do restore output will run assembly lines at slower rates than they did pre-shutdown.

The nonunioniz­ed carmakers’ intentions add to the urgency of talks General Motors Co., Ford Motor Co. and Fiat Chrysler Automobile­s NV are having with the United Auto Workers that weigh the need to get back to business against the possibilit­y that reopening will sicken employees.

“A lot of automakers are looking at some point in May starting production for at least half or a majority” of their plants, said Jeff Aznavorian, president of Clips & Clamps Industries, a supplier to Fiat Chrysler and other manufactur­ers. “All of them are planning on staggering those openings to make sure their processes are in place so they can go back to work safely.”

Less-dire sales

Weeks ago, analysts assumed there would be little reason for the industry to rush its restart. Sales in China plummeted almost 80 percent in the wake of the country’s coronaviru­s outbreak early this year, and some were expecting a decline of similar magnitude for the U.S. Yet demand has held up better than expected, with researcher­s LMC Automotive and J.D. Power predicting a 50 percent decline this month.

“We want to be able to have a steady supply of products based on the anticipate­d demand from consumers,” Chris Reynolds, Toyota’s chief administra­tive officer in North America, told reporters Thursday, noting the Japanese automaker will prioritize output of SUV and trucks. “Their production cadence might be a little bit faster than those plants that make sedans.”

The traditiona­l Detroit automakers also are gearing up. “We’re confident, we’re ready to go with the proper safety protocols in place,” Gerald Johnson, GM’s executive vice president of global manufactur­ing, said in an interview Thursday. “We surveyed our supply base. They are as committed as we are. They’re as ready to start as we are.”

While the UAW likely won’t want to put its companies at a competitiv­e disadvanta­ge or keep its members from earning bigger paychecks again, the union also is leery of reopening plants too soon after two dozen union workers at Ford, GM and Fiat Chrysler have died of Covid-19 complicati­ons.

“The one thing that is a priority of all parties is the health and safety of UAW Ford, General Motors and FCA employees, their families and their communitie­s,” Rory Gamble, the union’s president, said in a late Wednesday statement.

Speaking at GM’s shuttered transmissi­on plant north of Detroit that’s now making face masks, Johnson said the company is figuring out what timing is right without compromisi­ng on safety. “It’s not either-or,” he said. “It’s our responsibi­lity to be safe and bring the economy back.”

Slow ramp-up

Because many factories were running at full speed prior to the shutdown, automakers were carrying plenty of inventory of both parts and finished vehicles. Toyota estimates it has at least two days’ worth of components in stock at its assembly plants.

“Suppliers won’t have to rush parts to us immediatel­y,” said Sean Suggs, the president of Toyota’s Corolla plant in Blue Springs, Miss. “We already have a pipeline.”

The process of restarting production will unfold in stages and it could take months for certain products to return to full capacity. With supply chains increasing­ly global, it’s unclear when all components needed will be available.

“We do expect to see a slow ramp-up of volumes over the coming weeks” starting the first week of May, said Julie Fream, chief executive officer of the Original Equipment Suppliers Associatio­n, an auto parts industry trade group. “That doesn’t mean that all plants will be back online and certainly not that all shifts will be working.”

Not all companies in the supply chain will resume output at the same time, nor are all states in alignment on policy. Michigan’s Governor Gretchen Whitmer on Wednesday cautioned automakers in her state to “slowly engage in a safe manner,” while Southern governors are pushing hard to become the first to lift shelter-inplace orders.

“Even if the stay-at-home gets extended, there may be some exceptions,” said Jeff Schuster, senior vice president of forecastin­g for researcher LMC Automotive.

“I have no doubt that the industry is lobbying hard for that.”

Schuster expects the industry to produce at 50 percent of normal production levels or lower at least through May, if not through the remainder of the second quarter. “Following the model they used in China, it’s probably one shift initially, heavy-duty disinfecti­ng and cleaning, slower line rates because of social distancing, staggered entrance and exits, temperatur­e monitoring and, if they can get them, those quick selfadmini­stered test kits,” he said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States