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China orders reopening of auto plants idled by coronavirus

Automakers are reopening factories in China that were idled by concerns over spread of the coronavirus as they try to reverse a sales slump in their biggest market.

Global supply chains disrupted as Toyota, Ford, VW, GM, Nissan slow production

Cubicles are set up to separate workers during meal time in their canteen at a factory in Yantai city in eastern China's Shandong province. China has ordered a return to work of factories that had shut down. (The Associated Press)

Automakers are reopening factories in China that were idled by concerns over spread of the coronavirus as they try to reverse a sales slump in their biggest market.

Local officials have orders from the ruling Communist Party to get businesses functioning again, while still enforcing anti-disease curbs that shut down much of the world's second-largest economy.

"Local governments are putting their full weight behind helping businesses open," the president of the American Chamber of Commerce in Shanghai, Ker Gibbs, said in a statement.

Toyota Motor Co. said two factories reopened Monday with one of the usual two daily shifts working. Volkswagen AG, Ford Motor Co., Mercedes Benz and Chinese brand Geely resumed some operations last week. General Motors Co. said a "staggered start" across its factories began Saturday. Nissan Motor Co. plans to restart this week.

Meanwhile, Hyundai Motor plans to suspend work at one of its plants in Ulsan, South Korea, this week because of a possible coronavirus infection.

Don't come to work if you've been to Wuhan

Automakers say they are checking employees for the coronavirus's telltale fever, barring visitors and telling employees to stay home if they have been in Wuhan, the city at the centre of the outbreak, or other areas that have imposed travel curbs.

The outbreak prompted the government to extend the Lunar New Year holiday to keep factories and offices closed and workers at home.

People wear face masks and goggles in Beijing on Feb. 15. After extending the Lunar New Year holiday, the government wants everyone to return to work, but not if they've been to Wuhan. (Mark Schiefelbein/The Associated Press)

The government has told employees who can work from home to stay there, but China's vast manufacturing industries that supply the world with smartphones, toys and other goods need workers in factories.

Obstacles include a requirement for workers who return from other areas as millions are doing after the holiday to make sure they are illness-free by staying at home for its 14-day incubation period.

Affecting global supply chains

"Most factories have a severe shortage of workers, even after they are allowed to open," said Gibbs. "This is going to have a severe impact on global supply chains that is only beginning to show up."

Automakers are under pressure to reverse a two-year-old sales decline in a Chinese market they hope will propel global revenue.

Sales of SUVs, minivans and sedans hit an annual peak of 24.7 million in 2017 and have declined since then. Last year's sales tumbled 9.6 per cent to 21.4 million.

The coronavirus "adds to the challenges that the sector is already facing," said Fitch Ratings in a report.

Groupe Renault said one of its factories in the southern city of Guangzhou, near Hong Kong, reopened Monday, but the French automaker gave no indication of the status of another factory in Wuhan.

Challenge to get parts makers producing

Sales of vehicles are likely to be depressed through April, Fitch said. It said production might fall by the high single digits in the first half of 2020 compared with a year earlier.

GM, Toyota and others said the pace of production depends on how fast they can restart the flow of components from thousands of Chinese suppliers that also shut down.

That disruption could have global repercussions: UBS estimates China supplies eightper centof auto parts exports worldwide.

With files from Reuters