Canadian Manufacturing

GM gears up to restart some engine production in Ontario

The Canadian Press
   

Manufacturing Automotive


The HFV6 engine line will resume followed by the balance of St. Catharines operations, CAMI and Oshawa stamped parts

A truck engine manufactured at GM’s St. Catharines Propulsion Plant. PHTO: GM

OSHAWA, Ont. — General Motors plans to restart some production at its engine plant in St. Catharines, Ont. next week ahead of a wider restart of North American operations the week of May 18.

The automaker will reopen the plants under “extensive safety measures” following considerable planning, said spokeswoman Jennifer Wright by email.

“Starting May 11th a portion of our HFV6 line will resume in St. Catharines and the balance of St. Catharines operations, CAMI and Oshawa Stamped Parts Operations will come back gradually in the weeks that follow.”

The St. Catharines plant has about 1,224 employees, while the CAMI plant in Ingersoll, Ont., has some 2,470. The Oshawa stamping plant has about 348 employees after the company ended auto assembly there last year.

Advertisement

GM’s restart announcement comes a day after Fiat Chrysler Automobiles said it expected to have all but one of its plants in North America restarted the week of May 18.

Related:


Detroit automakers look to restart N. America plants May 18

GM Canada joins fight against COVID-19 with mask production in Oshawa


Fiat Chrysler, which has Ontario production facilities in Brampton, Windsor and Etobicoke, noted that its joint venture plants in China have been back up and running for two months with no issues to date.

Ford said in late April that it was starting preliminary work to restart operations but did not give specific dates for when it would reopen factories.

GM made its restart announcement while announcing first quarter results that showed net income down by 88% as COVID-19 restrictions affected sales.

The company reported a profit of US$237 million in the first quarter after revenue was down 6% to US$32.7 billion.

Advertisement

Stories continue below