' ... At the factories, around 3,300 blue-collar workers could lose jobs in
the U.S. and another 2,600 in Canada ... '

https://www.axios.com/general-motors-restructuring-electric-vehicles-2b7bbb52-2034-4d60-8375-409866626c31.html
The electric vehicle stakes of GM's restructuring
November 27, 2018  Ben Geman

General Motors' plan to shutter several plants and cut thousands of workers
is a glimpse into big changes that may loom as major automakers make the
slow transition to electric vehicles.

Driving the news: As my Axios colleagues reported, GM said Monday that it
will cut 15% of its salaried workforce, estimated to be more than 14,000
people in North America. It will idle factories in Michigan, Ohio, Maryland
and Canada.

The intrigue: The auto giant called it part of a restructuring that will
help devote more resources to fully battery-powered offerings — even as it
also focuses on larger gasoline-powered products in the move away from some
sedans.

    The company is focusing on crossovers, trucks and SUVs, while "resources
allocated to electric and autonomous vehicle programs will double in the
next two years," the company said.

    By next year, it will no longer make the Buick LaCrosse, the Chevrolet
Impala, or the Cadillac CT6 sedan.

    The plan also includes killing off the Chevy Volt, a plug-in
gasoline-electric hybrid with limited range first launched in 2010. 

The big picture: Autotrader analyst Michelle Krebs called the GM move the
result of several forces, including a downturn in the North American and
Chinese markets, a consumer shift toward SUVs, and tariffs and trade policy.

    But one impetus is to position itself for electric and autonomous
offerings that won't be money makers any time soon, she tells Axios. "It has
got to be very profitable right now to finance all that.”

    The automaker plans to launch at least 20 all-electric models by 2023.

"GM is really betting big on autonomous and electric vehicles, and so it has
got to shore up its profits right now prepare for that future."
— Michelle Krebs

But, but, but: Via Greentech Media, the Union of Concerned Scientists' David
Reichmuth offers a critical view of GM's near-term positioning for its
long-term, more electrified future.

    “I like what they said about electrification; the problem is what
they’re investing in," he tells Greentech, noting the company's focus on
SUVs and pickups.

    "I think GM and a lot of the companies know that electrification is the
future, but they’re prioritizing the short-term profits from some of these
less efficient gasoline vehicles," he says.

What's next: Mark Muro, a Brookings Institution expert in industrial
transitions, also tells me the GM move is about slowing sales in the U.S.
and China and the shift away from sedans.

    But he adds, "The changes are equally all about accelerating the
company’s move toward into the future of mobility. In that sense the
restructuring reflects the company’s aggressive transition from gas to
electric and analog to digital."

    That will shift the employee base, with more emphasis on software
engineers and electrical engineers, Muro says. He called the changes part of
maintaining a competitive industry.

    "There will be excruciating pain in some places left behind," Muro says.

Go deeper:

    Look for more car factories to close [
https://www.axios.com/general-motors-american-automakers-closures-detroit-7315b7ba-da81-4786-af35-fef3aacb3675.html
]

    Analysts react to GM job cutsclose [
https://www.axios.com/analysts-react-to-general-motors-restructuring-2ce0a3eb-a459-4a24-a172-293073d4a09b.html
]

    Politicians react to GM closings in their backyardsclose [
https://www.axios.com/general-motors-plant-closing-politician-reactions-bd0dbd67-09fa-4daa-bfcd-843f991b94bb.html
] ... [© axios.com]


https://www.chicagotribune.com/business/ct-biz-gm-plant-closing-restructuring-20181126-story.html
GM to slash up to 14,000 jobs in North America; 7 plants could close as part
of restructuring
2018-11-26  Tom Krisher Associated Press

6 cars to be killed by GM plant closures

[image]  General Motors follows Ford's and Fiat Chrysler Automobiles'
pullout from the sedan segment with the planned closure of four factories in
the U.S. and one in Canada by the end of 2019. In addition to laying off or
buying out 14,000 employees, the planned discontinuation of the Buick
LaCrosse, Cadillac CT6, Cadillac XTS, Chevy Impala, Chevy Volt, and Chevy
Cruze sedan and hatch is expected to save GM $6 billion  (Robert Duffer)

General Motors will cut up to 14,000 workers in North America and put five
plants up for possible closure as it abandons many of its car models and
restructures to focus more on autonomous and electric vehicles, the
automaker announced Monday.

The reductions could amount to as much as 8 percent of GM's global workforce
of 180,000 employees.

The restructuring reflects changing North American auto markets as
manufacturers continue to shift away from cars toward SUVs and trucks. In
October, almost 65 percent of new vehicles sold in the U.S. were trucks or
SUVs. That figure was about 50 percent cars just five years ago.

GM is shedding cars largely because it doesn't make money on them, Citi
analyst Itay Michaeli wrote in a note to investors.

"We estimate sedans operate at a significant loss, hence the need for
classic restructuring," he wrote.

The reduction includes about 8,000 white-collar employees, or 15 percent of
GM's North American white-collar workforce. Some will take buyouts while
others will be laid off.

At the factories, around 3,300 blue-collar workers could lose jobs in the
U.S. and another 2,600 in Canada, but some U.S. workers could transfer to
truck or SUV factories that are increasing production. The cuts mark GM's
first major downsizing since shedding thousands of jobs in the Great
Recession.

Trump has harsh remarks for GM over layoffs »

The company also said it will stop operating two additional factories
outside North America by the end of next year, in addition to a previously
announced plant closure in Gunsan, South Korea.

General Motors Co.'s pre-emptive strike to get leaner before the next
downturn likely will be followed by Ford Motor Co., which has said it is
restructuring and will lay off an unspecified number of white-collar
workers. Toyota Motor Corp. also has discussed cutting costs, even though
it's building a new assembly plant in Alabama.

GM isn't the first to abandon much of the car market. Fiat Chrysler
Automobiles got out of small and midsize cars two years ago, while Ford
announced plans to shed all cars but the Mustang sports car in the U.S. in
the coming years.

The layoffs come amid the backdrop of a trade wars between the U.S., China
and Europe that likely will lead to higher prices for imported vehicles and
those exported from the U.S. GM CEO Mary Barra said the company faces
challenges from tariffs but she did not directly link the layoffs to them.

GM doesn't foresee an economic downturn and is making the cuts "to get in
front of it while the company is strong and while the economy is strong,"
Barra told reporters.

Factories that could be closed include assembly plants in Detroit and
Oshawa, Ontario, and Lordstown, Ohio, as well as transmission plants in
Warren, Mich., and near Baltimore.

The announcement worried GM workers who could lose their jobs.

"I don't know how I'm going to feed my family," Matt Smith, a worker at the
Ontario factory, said Monday outside the plant's south gate, where workers
blocked trucks from entering or leaving. "It's hard. It's horrible." Smith's
wife also works at the plant. The couple has an 11-month-old at home.

Workers at the Ontario plant walked off the job Monday but were expected to
return Tuesday.

After the morning announcement, Barra was to head for Washington to speak
with White House economic adviser Larry Kudlow in what was described as a
previously scheduled meeting, according to a White House official who spoke
on condition of anonymity because the official was not authorized to discuss
the meeting publicly.

GM, Honda teaming up to produce self-driving vehicles »

President Donald Trump, who has made bringing back auto jobs a big part of
his appeal to Ohio and other Great Lakes states that are crucial to his
re-election, said his administration and lawmakers are exerting "a lot of
pressure" on GM.

Trump said he was being tough on Barra. He said he told the company that the
U.S. has done a lot for GM and that if its cars aren't selling, the company
needs to produce ones that will.

At a rally near GM's Lordstown, Ohio, plant last summer, Trump told people
not to sell their homes because the jobs are "all coming back."

Most of the factories to be affected by GM's restructuring build cars that
will not be sold in the U.S. after next year. They could close or they could
get different vehicles to build. Their futures will be part of contract
talks with the United Auto Workers union next year.

The Detroit-based union has already condemned GM's actions and threatened to
fight them "through every legal, contractual and collective bargaining
avenue open to our membership."

Bobbi Marsh, who has worked assembling the Chevrolet Cruze compact car at
the Ohio plant since 2008, said she can't understand why the factory might
close given the strong economy.

"I can't believe our president would allow this to happen," she said Monday.

She now faces an uncertain future, not knowing whether the plant will close
for good or if there's a chance it could find another use.

"Everything is up in the air," she said. "I don't want to give up hope for
this facility and these people. I spend more time around them than my own
family. It would be like breaking up a family."

[image]  Oshawa plant  A worker checks the paint on a Camaro at the GM
factory in Oshawa, Ontario, on June 10, 2011. General Motors may close the
plant. Around 3,300 blue-collar workers could lose jobs in Canada. (Frank
Gunn/Canadian Press)

Democratic Sen. Sherrod Brown said the move will be disastrous for the
region around Youngstown, Ohio, east of Cleveland, where GM is one of the
area's few remaining industrial anchors.

"GM received record tax breaks as a result of the GOP's tax bill last year,
and has eliminated jobs instead of using that tax windfall to invest in
American workers," he said in a statement.

Many of those who will lose jobs are now working on conventional cars with
internal combustion engines. Barra said the industry is changing rapidly and
moving toward electric propulsion, autonomous vehicles and ride-sharing, and
GM must adjust.

She said GM is still hiring people with expertise in software and electric
and autonomous vehicles.

GM will stop producing cars and transmissions at the plants through 2019. In
all, six car models were scrapped, leaving the company with nine remaining
car models.

The automaker said it was ending Chevrolet Volt production because the
vehicle was meant to be a bridge to fully electric cars when it was
introduced about a decade ago. The Volt has a small battery that can take it
about 50 miles, then it switches to a small gasoline engine.

Since it was introduced, battery technology has improved dramatically. Now
the full-electric Chevrolet Bolt can go up to 238 miles on a single charge.

GM builds full-size Chevrolet and GMC pickups in Mexico, and it recently
announced that a new Chevrolet Blazer SUV will be built there. Also, GM
imports the Buick Envision midsize SUV from China.

Building GM's Detroit plant cost thousands their homes. Now that factory is
slated to close. »

Among the possibilities on the chopping block are the Detroit/Hamtramck
assembly plant, which makes the Buick LaCrosse, the Chevrolet Impala and
Volt, and the Cadillac CT6, all slow-selling cars. LaCrosse and Volt
production will end March 1, while CT6 and Impala production would stop June
1.

The plant in Lordstown, Ohio, which makes the Chevrolet Cruze compact car
also is on the list, and Barra said the Cruze would no longer be sold in the
U.S. Production would stop March 1.

Work on six-speed transmissions made at the Warren, Mich., transmission
plant would stop Aug. 1, while the Baltimore transmission plant would stop
production April 1, GM said.

Meanwhile, GM's plant in Oshawa, Ontario, will stop making the Impala,
Cadillac XTS and 2018 full-size pickups in the fourth quarter of next year.
The Canadian plant appeared to be most in danger of closing.

Ontario Premier Doug Ford said he talked to the head of GM on Sunday and was
told "the ship has already left the dock" when he asked if there was
anything Ontario could do.

Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said he spoke to Barra on Sunday to
express his "deep disappointment" with the closure.

The AP’s Rob Gillies in Toronto, John Seewer in Toledo, Ohio, and Zeke
Miller in Washington contributed.

This story has been corrected from an earlier version to show that up to
14,000 workers could lose jobs instead of 14,700 ...

MORE COVERAGE
GM offers buyouts to 18,000 salaried workers in North America [
https://www.chicagotribune.com/business/ct-biz-gm-buyouts-earnngs-20181031-story.html
] ... [© chicagotribune.com]


https://www.greentechmedia.com/articles/read/gm-restructuring-reveals-a-disconnect-between-suv-sales-and-an-ev-future#gs.FZ0IMgs
GM Restructuring Reveals a ‘Disconnect’ Between SUV Sales Today and an EV
Future
November 26, 2018  General Motors’ long-term success may come down to how
well it bridges the divide between current demand for lucrative, gas-powered
SUVs and an all-electric future ... Union of Concerned Scientists’ clean
vehicles program. “A lot of it in the short-term has been around their SUVs
and pickup trucks. I think GM and a lot of the companies know that
electrification is the future, but they’re prioritizing the short-term
profits from some of these less efficient gasoline vehicles.” ... hypocrisy" 
GM’s reorganization arguably primes the market to move away from
electrification, or at least pits the automaker’s near-term and long-term
strategies against one another ...
...
https://www.freep.com/story/money/business/2018/11/27/chevy-volt-donald-trump-general-motors/2120687002/
Chevy Volt was going to save Detroit. Now its workers are losing jobs
Nov. 27, 2018  'Bring back jobs'  On Monday, GM ... plans to close five
plants, including the Detroit factory that built the Chevy Volt ... It will
kill those cars, and a few others, after the assembly lines shut down.
Thousands of American workers are likely to lose their jobs, from the
factories that are closing and from the parts suppliers, transportation
workers and the like whose jobs support the assembly plants ... GM engineers
thought that engine would help traditional car consumers accept an electric
vehicle. As it turned out, traditional car buyers were never going to ...


[ref
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]
...
https://www.google.com/search?q=GM+restructuring+electric
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