Houston Chronicle

Foreign auto plants to reopen in Mexico

- By Mark Stevenson

MEXICO CITY — On a day Mexico saw its worst daily increase yet in coronaviru­s cases, foreignown­ed auto plants began setting dates for reopening.

Volkswagen de Mexico said late Thursday it is planning to reopen its assembly plant in Puebla state and its engine factory in Guanajuato state on June 1.

General Motors said it hadn’t fixed “an exact date” for reopening its plant, also in the Guanajuato city of Silao, but some workers there reported getting notices to report for work on May 18.

Ford de Mexico said, “We are working very closely with the Mexican government, complying with the health and security protocols. We hope to receive their approval to operate in Mexico.”

Toyota and Nissan did not immediatel­y respond to requests for comment on possible reopenings of their plants in Mexico.

Pressure is growing both domestical­ly and from the United States for Mexico to reopen manufactur­ing activities, something President Andrés Manuel López Obrador says could happen by May 17 in areas of the country that haven’t been hit hard by the virus.

Mexico has lost about 500,000 jobs because of the pandemic lockdown, and small store owners wrote a public letter to López Obrador on Wednesday complainin­g they can’t get stocks of basic supplies because hundreds of towns in Mexico have closed themselves off for fear of contagion.

In late March, the U.S. government launched a campaign to get Mexico to reopen assembly plants, suggesting the supply chain of the North American free trade zone could be permanentl­y affected if they didn’t resume production. Mexico has said it is working on a joint plan with the U.S. and Canada to reopen factories, especially auto plants.

But the dangers of reopening are evident.

On Thursday, Mexico reported its largest one-day increase so far in confirmed coronaviru­s cases, with almost 2,000 new infections nationwide — a 7.2 percent increase compared from Wednesday’s rise. Total deaths neared the 3,000 mark.

Volkswagen said in a statement it was reopening “with the aim of getting the needed elements together to ensure a stable supply chain.”

In a statement on its reopening plans, GM said: “We are waiting for the plan that the Economy Department will present for a gradual resumption of activities in the automotive industry. As soon as authoritie­s present that plan, we will be able to restart GM operations” in Mexico.

But workers at the GM plant in Silao reported receiving messages with a GMC logo telling them to report for temperatur­e checks and health questionna­ires at the plant.

Mexico says it wants to be cautious, and indicates that hard-hit cities like Mexico City, Tijuana, Ciudad Juarez and Villahermo­sa probably won’t allow widespread business reopening anytime soon.

Assistant Health Secretary Hugo López-Gatell said Thursday that reopening “doesn’t mean that every place is going to get back to the same level of normality.”

In the past, officials have mentioned re-opening business in the least-affected states but limiting interstate travel through highway checkpoint­s.

However, the usual measures practiced at such checkpoint­s — taking travelers’ temperatur­es and asking about symptoms — are of limited use in stopping the spread of the coronaviru­s.

In some places, like the border assembly plants in Ciudad Juarez, across the border from El Paso, workers have demonstrat­ed against being forced to work in close quarters and with inadequate protection measures.

But in other parts of Mexico, many residents appear eager to get back to some semblance of normality.

 ?? Pedro Pardo / AFP / TNS file ?? Workers in 2017 are shown on the auto parts production line of the Bosch factory in San Luis Potosi, Mexico.
Pedro Pardo / AFP / TNS file Workers in 2017 are shown on the auto parts production line of the Bosch factory in San Luis Potosi, Mexico.

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