DETROIT – General Motors plans to invest more than $1 billion in two Michigan plants for production of next-generation heavy-duty trucks, the company said Monday.
The investment includes $788 million to prepare its Flint Assembly plant to build the heavy-duty gas and diesel trucks. Another $233 million will be invested in the automaker’s Flint Metal Center to support production of the vehicles. Both plants are located in mid-Michigan.
Despite GM’s commitment to exclusively offer all-electric vehicles by 2035, the company continues to invest in traditional vehicles such as the Chevrolet Silverado and GMC Sierra heavy-duty pickups.
The notably profitable trucks are in high demand, and sales are needed to assist in funding the automaker’s investments in EVs.
A GM spokesman said construction related to the investments is scheduled to begin during the fourth quarter. He declined to disclose details and timing of the next-generation pickups.
In 2022, GM reported sales of its heavy-duty pickups increased by 38% compared to the prior year, amounting to nearly 288,000 trucks sold.
The investment announcement comes ahead of contract negotiations between the Detroit automakers, including GM, and the United Auto Workers union this summer.
For investors, UAW negotiations are typically a short-term headwind every four years that result in higher costs. But this year’s negotiations are expected to be among the most contentious and important in recent memory, fueled by a yearslong organized labor movement across the country, a pro-union president and an industry in transition to all-electric vehicles.
“When business is booming as it has been for the past decade — due to the hard work of UAW members — the company should continue to invest in its workforce,” UAW Vice President Mike Booth, who oversees the union’s GM unit, said in a release.
UAW leaders publicly laid out their top bargaining issues last week, including reinstatement of a cost-of-living adjustment that was eliminated during the Great Recession; stronger job security; and the end of a grow-in, or tiered, pay system that has members earning different wages and benefits.
ivermectina online – oral candesartan 8mg tegretol 200mg cost
generic accutane 40mg – order absorica online zyvox canada
buy amoxicillin online cheap – ipratropium drug how to get ipratropium without a prescription
order zithromax online cheap – nebivolol without prescription order bystolic 5mg pills
cheap omnacortil 5mg – buy azithromycin 500mg online purchase progesterone pills
cheap neurontin without prescription – itraconazole buy online buy itraconazole 100 mg sale
order lasix 40mg online – piracetam 800mg us betamethasone 20 gm for sale
augmentin brand – nizoral 200mg pill buy cymbalta generic
cheap semaglutide 14 mg – buy periactin 4 mg periactin us
order tizanidine for sale – where to buy tizanidine without a prescription purchase microzide
cialis online canada – sildenafil 100mg cheap sildenafil cheap
order viagra generic – real viagra sites cialis mail order usa
order cenforce 100mg generic – buy cenforce without a prescription buy metformin 1000mg pill
brand prilosec 10mg – omeprazole 10mg cost tenormin 100mg generic
oral depo-medrol cost – buy aristocort pill buy triamcinolone 10mg online cheap
clarinex over the counter – desloratadine 5mg pill buy priligy no prescription
order misoprostol generic – orlistat 60mg over the counter diltiazem brand