GM says Vauxhall plant in Ellesmere Port is safe

Posted In: Manufacturing

By GEORGE FREY - AP Business Writer - Associated Press

Thursday, November 26, 2009


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General Motors Co. said Thursday it will not close its Vauxhall plant in Ellesmere Port, England, and doesn't expect job cuts there as part of its restructuring of European operations.

GM Europe gave no details on the future of another Vauxhall plant in Luton, England, but said it expected to give an update in the coming days.

The company said its plans call for output to increase at Ellesmere Port to three daily shifts in 2011 from two currently.

"To support the launch in 2010 of the new Astra Sports Tourer and to prepare for the third shift introduction in 2011, the plan is for no redundancies as all current labor would need to be utilized to staff the third shift," a GM Europe statement said.

Uta Deutsch, a GM U.K. spokeswoman, said company officials expect to meet Friday or Monday with employees at Luton — which builds Opel, Vauxhall, Renault and Nissan vans.

Luton has a contract with Renault until 2012 and currently is in talks with Renault to secure further work from the French company beyond that date, she said.

News of GM's plans for the British plants come as the U.S. automaker embarks on a restructuring effort for its European operations, which include Opel and Vauxhall.

That is expected to result in some 9,000 job cuts — up to 60 percent of them in Germany. On Wednesday, GM Europe chief Nick Reilly said that the future of an Opel plant in Antwerp, Belgium is "uncertain."

Opel employs around 45,000 people in Europe, about 25,000 of them in Germany.

GM hopes that European governments will help pay most of the €3.3 billion ($4.9 billion) it needs to restructure its European operations.

On Thursday, however, Belgium's Flanders region said a proposed €500 million loan for GM is "not on the table" until it has more details on Antwerp's future. Local unions said they expect between 2,000 to 2,600 jobs to go.

Kris Peeters, the regional premier, said he would talk to economy ministers of other European countries where Opel operates on Dec. 4 about how they could fund the company. EU nations agreed this week not to negotiate individually with it.

"We need more information, we need the business plan, we need the position of Antwerp," he said, describing the company's lack of transparency on the future of the Belgian plant as "a very big problem for us."

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