General Motors Co’s top European official said on Friday that a plan for Opel to be unveiled next month would include a schedule to launch new models and a financial break-even target.
Nick Reilly’s comments in an official GM blog came as the US automaker finalizes its restructuring plan for Opel and British sister brand Vauxhall, a program it has said will result in about 9,000 job cuts across the continent.
“We have developed a sustainable plan for the future, including a break-even target, which we expect to unveil in the middle of December,” Reilly wrote.
“That plan will involve structural costs reductions,” he added. “But importantly it will also include new product commitments, continued investment in research and development and an aggressive schedule for new model launches.”
GM is currently in consultations with European government officials and employee representatives.
Reilly said this week that up to 60 percent of the job cuts could come from Germany, and that the future of an Opel plant in Antwerp, Belgium is “uncertain.”
“If Opel-Vauxhall is to flourish, every stakeholder will need to contribute to our viability plan,” he wrote on Friday. “As part of that effort, we hope to secure financial assistance from governments in the member states where we have significant operations.”
Opel and Vauxhall employ 48,000 people in Europe, more than 24,000 of them in Germany. GM has said it needs 3.3 billion euros (US$4.9 billion) to restructure its European operations.
GM shocked European governments and employees earlier this month by abruptly canceling the planned sale of a majority in Opel to a consortium of Canadian auto parts maker Magna International Inc and Russian lender Sberbank.
Separately, a spokeswoman for GM’s Saab unit said several potential buyers had expressed interest in the Swedish brand after specialty car maker pulled out of a deal to acquire it.
On Tuesday, a group led by Sweden’s Koenigsegg Automotive AB dropped out of a deal to buy Saab that had been in the works since June.
Saab spokeswoman Gunilla Gustavs says a few potential buyers have approached Saab after the deal fell through. She didn’t identify the potential suitors on Friday, but said Saab was in close contact with more than one.
UNCERTAINTIES: Exports surged 34.1% and private investment grew 7.03% to outpace expectations in the first half, although US tariffs could stall momentum The Chung-Hua Institution for Economic Research (CIER, 中華經濟研究院) yesterday raised its GDP growth forecast to 3.05 percent this year on a robust first-half performance, but warned that US tariff threats and external uncertainty could stall momentum in the second half of the year. “The first half proved exceptionally strong, allowing room for optimism,” CIER president Lien Hsien-ming (連賢明) said. “But the growth momentum may slow moving forward due to US tariffs.” The tariff threat poses definite downside risks, although the scale of the impact remains unclear given the unpredictability of US President Donald Trump’s policies, Lien said. Despite the headwinds, Taiwan is likely
When Lika Megreladze was a child, life in her native western Georgian region of Guria revolved around tea. Her mother worked for decades as a scientist at the Soviet Union’s Institute of Tea and Subtropical Crops in the village of Anaseuli, Georgia, perfecting cultivation methods for a Georgian tea industry that supplied the bulk of the vast communist state’s brews. “When I was a child, this was only my mum’s workplace. Only later I realized that it was something big,” she said. Now, the institute lies abandoned. Yellowed papers are strewn around its decaying corridors, and a statue of Soviet founder Vladimir Lenin
UNIFYING OPPOSITION: Numerous companies have registered complaints over the potential levies, bringing together rival automakers in voicing their reservations US President Donald Trump is readying plans for industry-specific tariffs to kick in alongside his country-by-country duties in two weeks, ramping up his push to reshape the US’ standing in the global trading system by penalizing purchases from abroad. Administration officials could release details of Trump’s planned 50 percent duty on copper in the days before they are set to take effect on Friday next week, a person familiar with the matter said. That is the same date Trump’s “reciprocal” levies on products from more than 100 nations are slated to begin. Trump on Tuesday said that he is likely to impose tariffs
Japan is heavily investing in a new kind of ultra-thin, flexible solar panel that it hopes will help it meet renewable energy goals while challenging China’s dominance of the sector. Pliable perovskite panels are perfect for mountainous Japan, with its shortage of flat plots for traditional solar farms. A key component of the panels is iodine, something Japan produces more of than any country but Chile. The push faces some obstacles: Perovskite panels contain toxic lead, and, for now, produce less power and have shorter lifespans than their silicon counterparts. Still, with a goal of net zero by 2050 and a desire to