GM to stop making cars in Australia by 2017
CANBERRA, Australia - General Motors Co. (GM) said Wednesday it will stop making cars and engines in Australia by the end of 2017, with nearly 2,900 jobs to be lost, because of high production costs and competition.
The decision could spell the end of
car manufacturing in Australia as the industry will be too small for supporting
businesses such as parts makers to remain economic. Toyota Motor Corp.
announced it is reassessing its future in Australia. A union said 50,000 jobs
in the auto industry are in jeopardy.
GM's Australian subsidiary Holden once
dominated Australian auto sales, but lost market share to imported cars. Ford
Motor Co., once Holden's major rival in Australia, announced in May that it was
ending production in the country in 2016. Toyota is the only other auto
manufacturer in Australia.
Australia had four car manufacturers
before Mitsubishi Motors Corp. shut its doors in 2008.
GM's announcement has been anticipated
for months. The Australian government has been under mounting pressure to offer
increased subsidies to the Detroit-based company to keep it manufacturing in
Australia for the sake of the auto parts industry.
The decision reflected the
"perfect storm of negative influences" that Australia's auto industry
faces, GM's chief executive Dan Akerson said in a statement. Describing Australia
as "arguably the most competitive and fragmented auto market in the
world," he also blamed the sustained strength of the Australian dollar,
high costs of production, and a small population.
Holden, which has manufactured cars in
Australia for 65 years, would become a sales company, he said.
The announcement was made the same day
GM's Australia chairman Mike Devereux
said GM cars rebadged as Holdens would continue to be sold and serviced in
Australia after 2017.
GM is currently selling the
Australia-built Chevrolet SS in the United States. The 6.2-liter V-8 muscle car
is called the Holden VF Commodore in Australia.
"Building cars in this country is
just not sustainable," Devereux told reporters.
Industry Minister Ian Macfarlane said
he was "floored" when Devereux phoned and broke the news.
Macfarlane said he was disappointed
that GM had made its decision before an inquiry had completed an analysis of
government support of the auto industry.
Holden has received 1.8 billion
Australian dollars ($1.6 billion) in federal government assistance in the past
11 years.
"The task for the industry has
got measurably more difficult as a result of Holden's decision, but it is not impossible
to maintain a component and car industry in Australia," Macfarlane told
reporters.
Toyota said GM's decision put its own
ability to make Australian cars under "unprecedented pressure."
"We will now work with our suppliers, key stakeholders and the government to determine our next steps and whether we can continue operating as the sole vehicle manufacturer in Australia," Toyota said in a statement.
The Australian Manufacturing Workers'
Union, which represents most of the auto industry's workforce, predicted that
Toyota would also shut its Australian plant.
"Toyota have told me that they
won't be able to survive in Australia because of the lack of volume in the
component industry," AMWU vehicle division secretary Dave Smith told
reporters.
"This will spell the end of
50,000 automotive jobs," said Smith, blaming a lack of federal government
support for GM's decision.
Acting Prime Minister Warren Truss
said the number of cars manufactured in Australia had declined by one third in
only six years.
Auto makers in Australia produced
about 178,000 cars last year, according to the International Organization of
Motor Vehicle Manufacturers.
Truss said there more than 50 car
models available to a population of only 23 million people.
"While Australians say they want
locally manufactured cars ... the reality is they don't buy them," he
said.
