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Thailand Floods Disrupt Honda's Car Production In Canada, US


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Thailand floods disrupt Honda's car production in Canada, US

DETROIT, November 1, 2011 (AFP) - Japanese automaker Honda will slash production at its North America plants by 50 percent starting on Wednesday as suppliers in flood-ravaged Thailand are unable to deliver parts.

"A number of Honda suppliers in Asia currently are unable to maintain parts production, which is disrupting the flow of parts to our production operations in North America," the company said in a statement Monday.

Most of the parts for Honda and Acura vehicles are sourced from North American suppliers, but "a few critical electronic parts" come from Thailand, it said.

Starting on Wednesday, the company will cut in half its automobile assembly at all six of its plants in Canada and the United States for at least one week.

"It is anticipated that this situation will require adjustments for the next several weeks," said Honda spokesman Ed Miller.

"Subsequent adjustments will be announced as they are determined based on the parts supply situation," he added.

The release of the 2012 Honda CR-V could potentially be delayed by several weeks, the company said.

No layoffs are planned at any of Honda's North American facilities as a result of the disruption, the company added.

The Honda Civic is one of the best-selling cars in Canada and the United States.

Honda, like other automakers, was already struggling to crawl back from the devastating earthquake and tsunami that struck Japan in March and caused extensive damage to its industrial base.

Earlier on Monday, Honda said net profit for the fiscal first half plunged 77.4 percent year-on-year, as it grappled with the impact of the earthquake and a strong yen.

The automaker also held off giving an earnings forecast for the year ending March 2012 as it continued to assess the impact on its operations of Thailand's worst flooding in decades.

Toyota has also announced it will scale back production because of the Thailand flooding, including by temporarily cancelling overtime and Saturday production.

Unusually heavy monsoon rains have flooded large swathes of northern and central Thailand over the last three months, leaving at least 381 people dead and damaging millions of homes and livelihoods.

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-- (c) Copyright AFP 2011-11-01

Posted

Perhaps the rebuke that Thailand will receive from International counterparts who stand to lose millions will carry more weight than the pleas of the Thai public who have lost family members, properties and livelihoods who will largely go ignored and lied to and manipulated.

Before we have any Yingluck sympathizers jumping in with the "well its not her fault that the rains were unprecedented" sentiments, let's be as clear as the objective International business community will be when we say that it's solely because of her government's mismanagement of this series of events that has created such widespread and very costly damage.

That said,.. I doubt that any international pressure would actually make a scrap of difference given the thick skinned attitude to foreign opinion or relevance of farang interfering in Thai affairs.

Sadly this will probably end up as a coup for Mr T, a huge windfall of cash from "relief" funds for all those in the line of pecking order,.. and a Mai Pen Rai for the rest of Thailand.

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