danegreen
SDD Junior Member
This article came across my inbox this morning and I thought I would share it with the group.
Ford to further cut pickup, SUV production.
The AP (5/21, Durbin, Krisher) reports that "Ford Motor Co. said Tuesday it will further cut production of its pickups and large sport utility vehicles," as their "sales plummet[ed] due to high gas prices and the slump in housing construction." Ford, which is "anxious to hold onto its longtime lead in U.S. pickup sales, also is working on a smaller, more fuel-efficient version of its best-selling F-150 pickup that will likely hit the market in 2011." According to spokeswoman Angie Kozleski, "the Michigan Truck plant in suburban Wayne would be shut down for five weeks starting in late June."
Diesel engine supplier pauses production. The AP (5/20) reports that Illinois's International Truck and Engine, which "supplies diesels for Ford pickup trucks," will halt "diesel engine production Friday, a move that will idle several hundred workers until the end of a summer shutdown in mid-July." Roy Wiley, a spokesman for Warrenville, Ill.-based Navistar International, which "is the operating arm of Navistar," said that "high fuel prices and a construction industry slump has hampered demand for the engines."
Ford to further cut pickup, SUV production.
The AP (5/21, Durbin, Krisher) reports that "Ford Motor Co. said Tuesday it will further cut production of its pickups and large sport utility vehicles," as their "sales plummet[ed] due to high gas prices and the slump in housing construction." Ford, which is "anxious to hold onto its longtime lead in U.S. pickup sales, also is working on a smaller, more fuel-efficient version of its best-selling F-150 pickup that will likely hit the market in 2011." According to spokeswoman Angie Kozleski, "the Michigan Truck plant in suburban Wayne would be shut down for five weeks starting in late June."
Diesel engine supplier pauses production. The AP (5/20) reports that Illinois's International Truck and Engine, which "supplies diesels for Ford pickup trucks," will halt "diesel engine production Friday, a move that will idle several hundred workers until the end of a summer shutdown in mid-July." Roy Wiley, a spokesman for Warrenville, Ill.-based Navistar International, which "is the operating arm of Navistar," said that "high fuel prices and a construction industry slump has hampered demand for the engines."