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03/06/2008

GM closing 4 truck and SUV plants in North America

General Motors is closing four truck and SUV plants in the U.S., Canada and Mexico as surging fuel prices hasten a dramatic shift to smaller vehicles.

Wagoner said the GM board has approved production of a new small Chevrolet car at a plant in Lordstown, Ohio, in mid-2010 and the Chevy Volt electric vehicle in Detroit.

Wagoner announced the moves in response to slumping sales of pickups and SUVs brought on by high oil prices. He said a market shift to smaller vehicles is permanent.
GM shares rose 36 cents, or 2.1 percent, to $17.80 in premarket trading.
The cuts will affect about 2,500 workers at each of the four facilities, although Wagoner did not know exact numbers. Many will be able to take openings created when 19,000 more U.S. hourly workers leave later this year through early retirement and buyout offers.
He said the company has no plans to allocate products to the four plants in the future.
"We really would not foresee the likely prospect of new products in the plants that we're announcing today that we'll cease production in," he told a Moraine, Ohio, city official who asked a question in a telephone conference call.
The moves will save the company $1 billion per year starting in 2010. Combined with previous efforts, GM will have cut costs by $15 billion a year, Wagoner said.
Wagoner said GM's board approved the production schedule of the Chevrolet Volt, and the company plans to bring the plug-in electric car to showrooms by the end of 2010. The Volt runs on an electric motor and has a small engine to recharge its batteries.
He said the change in the U.S. market to smaller vehicles likely is permanent. "We at GM don't think this is a spike or a temporary shift," Wagoner said.
The Detroit-based automaker also has just emerged from a spate of labor problems, with two local union strikes at key factories and a nearly three-month strike at key parts maker American Axle and Manufacturing Holdings Inc.
GM said in a recent regulatory filing the strikes will cost it a total of $2 billion before taxes in the second quarter.
Detroit's automakers have been making the shift to more fuel-efficient vehicles, but not at the pace that matches consumers' drive to hybrids and high mileage models made overseas. Gas prices have accelerated the retreat from trucks and sport utility vehicles, leaving the Big Three at the most critical crossroads in 30 years.
The U.S. market is difficult for every automaker, with consumer confidence weak and 2008 sales expected to be the lowest in more than a decade. But it is most difficult for the Detroit Three, who have relied more heavily on sales of trucks and SUVs than their foreign counterparts. Trucks make up 70 percent of Chrysler LLC's U.S. sales, for example, compared to 41 percent at Toyota Motor Corp.

Associated Press

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All this was done for the shareholders and Wagoner!
But it is a matter of fact that GM leadership has ignored this development for years and spent a lot of time in lobbyism instead of focusing on changing the product portfolio. What's about the Saturn Astra built in Antwerp? Why does nobody hear anything about this car? The compact car segment in the US has inccreased so much but mainly Toyota, Ford and other automakers do benefit. Unionists in the US are saying that there are not many dealerships for Saturn and not many adverstising on the Saturn Astra. This product could not help the US workers in the short term but a market success could help to pave the way for a successor product. It seems to be that this will not happen. Management mistakes and still plant closures as the ultimately result.
GM Headquarters in Canada Blockaded by Union Workers (Update2)

By Bill Koenig

June 4 (Bloomberg) -- General Motors Corp.'s main office in Canada was blockaded today by Canadian Auto Workers members protesting the automaker's decision to close a pickup-truck plant.

Members of CAW Local 222 started blocking the entrance to GM's Canadian headquarters in Oshawa, Ontario, at about 4:30 a.m. Toronto time, union spokeswoman Shannon Devine said in an interview. While the labor group is preventing vehicle access, employees are being permitted to walk to the facility, she said.

GM said yesterday it plans to shut the pickup plant at Oshawa next year, one of four factories the automaker is closing as it cuts output of pickups and sport-utility vehicles. The Detroit-based company, which hasn't had an annual profit since 2004, is paring annual truck capacity by 700,000 vehicles.

GM is trying to set up a meeting with Local 222's leadership, Stew Low, a Canada-based GM spokesman, said in an interview. ``It's a tough day for the GM family in Oshawa and we understand that,'' he said.

CAW President Buzz Hargrove yesterday called the plant closing ``illegal'' and said it violated the union's new three- year contract with GM. Hargrove said the labor group would fight the decision.

Changing Market

``This is about how the market has radically changed,'' GM Chief Executive Officer Rick Wagoner told reporters in Wilmington, Delaware, yesterday, referring to the scheduled Oshawa plant shut closing. ``For the good of the company, we have to adapt to it.''

GM announced the plant shutdowns before its annual shareholders meeting in Wilmington.

Local 222 decided on the blockade instead of striking, Devine said. Workers at the Oshawa factory reported for work today. Union members who are blocking the offices either work other shifts or are laid off, she said.

The Oshawa plant produces Chevrolet Silverado and GMC Sierra large pickups. GM also will close factories in Moraine, Ohio; Janesville, Wisconsin; and Toluca, Mexico. The four plants employ a total of 7,590 hourly and 676 salaried employees.

The CBC reported the blockade earlier. GM fell 33 cents to $17.25 at 10:40 a.m. New York time in New York Stock Exchange composite trading.

To contact the reporter on this story: Bill Koenig in Southfield, Michigan, at wkoenig@bloomberg.net

Last Updated: June 4, 2008 11:05 EDT
This announcement was extremely frustrating for the Canadian Auto Workers. They settled and ratified their contract two weeks ago with an agreement to introduce new hybrid pickup trucks at the Oshawa, Ontario plant. GM decided to close the plant. The closing of pick up truck and SUV plants in the U.S. was disappointing but less of a shock to workers. Gas prices in the U.S. have directly impacted sales. Those in Europe have been paying these higher gas prices for years. It is a new experience in the states.
And if you are a Management guy you can still expect a big pay rise too!!
Glad to learn that the GM shares rised 2.1%

2500 workers axed, 2.1% raise.

You just have to fire 125 000 and the stock will double !

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