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BMW Will Idle Its Biggest Plant, Sidelining 11,000 U.S. Workers

BMW Poised to Idle Biggest Plant, With 11,000 U.S. Jobs on Line

(Bloomberg) -- BMW AG’s South Carolina SUV factory, one of the last U.S. auto assembly plants still operating, will be idled early next month.

The factory, which makes the brand’s lucrative X3, X5 and X7 sport utility vehicles, will shut down starting April 3 for more than two weeks, the German company said in a statement, confirming an earlier Bloomberg News report.

The plant is BMW’s largest production facility in the world, employing 11,000 people and boasting annual capacity of 450,000 vehicles. It’s also the biggest auto exporter by value in the U.S.

BMW Will Idle Its Biggest Plant, Sidelining 11,000 U.S. Workers

BMW imports many key components such as engines and transmissions from Europe, where production has virtually ground to a halt due to the spread of the coronavirus. The outbreak has also dampened demand in the U.S., where J.D. Power estimates sales may fall as low as 14 million vehicles this year from 17 million in 2019.

The pandemic “is having a major impact on the global demand for cars,” BMW said in the emailed statement. “We are therefore taking a flexible approach and adjusting our production volumes accordingly.”

Chief Executive Officer Oliver Zipse on Wednesday announced the idling of BMW factories across Europe, while a site in South Africa will also be closed. Sales will be significantly below 2019 levels and profitability the weakest for some years, he said.

German rival Daimler AG said Friday it will halt the majority of U.S. production, including its Mercedes-Benz plant in Tuscaloosa, Alabama, and a van plant in Charleston, South Carolina, for an initial period of two weeks. The closures will begin gradually next week and are meant to help contain the spread of the virus, a spokeswoman said.

Those moves follow General Motors Co., Ford Motor Co. and Fiat Chrysler Automobiles NV, which agreed Wednesday to shut down plants through the end of March to perform deep cleaning and re-balance production with collapsing new-car demand. Hyundai Motor Co., Honda Motor Co. and Toyota Motor Corp. and Volkswagen AG have also announced temporary factory closures in the U.S.

©2020 Bloomberg L.P.