Thursday, 23 May 2013

Ford closing shop in Australia after 90 years


Ford to halt car production in Australia


23 May, 2013


MELBOURNE - Car manufacturer Ford announced Thursday it will cease making vehicles in Australia in 2016 and axe 1,200 jobs, having produced its first car in the country in 1925.

Ford Australia chief executive Bob Graziano made the announcement as he revealed a loss of Aus$141 million (US$136 million) after tax in the last financial year, with losses of Aus$600 million over the last five years.


The main auto factory at Broadmeadows is one of the casualties as Ford Motors decides to close all operations in Australia by 2016, in a move that will have major advantages for Thailand. (Photo by Ford Motors)

"Unfortunately we will cease our manufacturing operations in October 2016. As a result, approximately 1,200 jobs will become redundant when those sites close," he said.

Graziano said the decision was the result of local manufacturing being "driven by increasingly challenging market conditions -- including market fragmentation and the high cost of manufacturing".

The jobs will go at Ford's Broadmeadows and Geelong manufacturing plants in Victoria state, which will close.

Ford did not say where it would pick up the slack. But when Ford closed previous assembly lines in the country, most of the jobs and assembly went to the Ford plant at Rayong.

According to Carsguide, an Australian website, "Ford's production lines in Thailand produce 450,000 vehicles a year; last year Broadmeadows built just 37,000 vehicles."

"We know this announcement is very difficult, especially for our employees," said Graziano.

"Providing support to those in our team whose roles will be affected is a key priority for us during this three-year transition period."

While manufacturing will stop, Ford will remain in Australia as an importer and dealer, employing some 1,500 people. Ford already imports all its Ford Focus models from Thailand.

Ford said its Australian operations had lost A$600m ($580m) over the last five years.

Australia's auto industry is struggling with the effects of the high local dollar, which has traded near or above parity with the greenback for almost two years, squeezing exports and compounding rising production costs.

Though Australia did not go into recession during the global financial crisis, domestic confidence has failed to return to pre-crisis levels, also hitting car sales.

Canberra extended a Aus$3.2 billion bailout to the ailing sector at the height of the global downturn and stepped in with additional lifelines to Ford and General Motors subsidiary Holden last year.

Ford first began making vehicles in Australia in 1925, when Model T cars rolled off the production line in Geelong.

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