VW, Bosch start factory bubbles during lockdown in Chengdu

Europe

Volkswagen Group, Bosch and Foxconn are keeping their workers on-site in their factories in Chengdu after the Chinese metropolis locked down its 21 million residents to contain a COVID-19 outbreak.

The automaker’s factory, jointly operated with its local partner FAW, entered a so-called “closed loop system” Thursday evening to maintain production, a company representative said on the phone on Friday, without elaborating.

Bosch has shifted to a closed-loop operation at two manufacturing sites for power tools and automotive components in Chengdu, with office staff working from home, a spokeswoman for its China business said.

Foxconn, the largest assembler of Apple devices, is also adopting the method at its facility that makes iPads there, according to a person familiar with the decision.

First used during the Beijing Winter Olympics as a way of keeping athletes and support staff separate from the wider population, closed loop, or factory bubble, is a China invention used to keep its economy running amid punishing efforts to stamp out COVID’s spread.

Closed loops typically require workers to travel from on-site accommodation to the factory and back, strictly avoiding contacts with outsiders, and be tested regularly for COVID.

Companies such as Tesla have even kept their workers sleeping on the floor during the Shanghai lockdown earlier this year.

There is pressure to keep factory operations running because the lockdown comes just days after the city moved past a two-week power crunch that shut down business operations, as household energy availability was prioritized.

With the triple whammy of drought, floods and the COVID lockdown this summer, Chengdu’s economy, which makes up 1.7 percent of China’s national gross domestic product, is being dealt a serious blow.

Massimo Bagnasco, chair of the southwest China chapter, European Union Chamber of Commerce in China, said government guidance is that a company can operate in a closed loop system if it’s considered important to the community.

In addition, businesses would have to satisfy local authorities that they can successfully manage the loop in a way that would not pose a threat to public health.

“Yesterday was kind of a messy time,” he said, adding a large majority of his members will not be able to operate under the loop system as they may not belong to a category that is viewed as fundamental to daily life.

“Everyone was trying to understand what they could do from an operational point of view of their business, as well from the individual point of view.”

While the closed loops have allowed some supply chains to continue operating amid lockdowns, they have also created problems of their own, like workers revolting over poor living and working conditions. The system has also been unable to prevent widespread disruption to global supply chains from the strictures of COVID Zero.

Chengdu, the capital of Sichuan province, is the biggest city to shut down since Shanghai’s bruising two-month lockdown starting end-March.

It also functions as a manufacturing hub in southwestern China for companies including Geely Automobile Holdings and Toyota.

Volvo’s Sichuan plant, now under the parent group of Geely, has suspended production due to the lockdown. The parent company said it would closely monitor the situation.

In the meantime, Hitachi’s two Chengdu plants that manufacture elevators and escalators are operating at reduced rates due to an order from authorities, Ryuhei Tanaka, a spokesman for the Japanese company said by phone.

Products You May Like

Articles You May Like

Column: A deep dive into how AI is changing the auto industry
Toyota And Subaru Sued Over 86 And BRZ Engines Failing Due To Oil Starvation
Moose Crashes BMW Workshop, Wages War On Restored E31 850i
Hackers Steal MLB Star Kris Bryant’s $200K Lamborghini By Rerouting Delivery
Hyundai names North American exec Jose Munoz as CEO, effective Jan. 1

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *