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Toyota calls off weekend production in N. America
by Staff Writers
Tokyo (AFP) Oct 27, 2011


Japan's Toyota Motor on Thursday called off weekend production at four North American plants as the impact of Thailand's worst flooding in decades prompted supply shortage fears.

Japan's biggest automaker said it had not decided on whether to resume production next week.

"Flooding in Thailand has caused some interruption in production for a number of Toyota suppliers in that region," the company said in a statement.

It said it will suspend production on Saturday at its vehicle manufacturing facilities in Indiana, Kentucky, Ontario Canada and its engine manufacturing facility in West Virginia "as a means of conserving affected parts".

The automaker had planned overtime production at those plants on Saturday as it looks to continue making up for lost output as a result of the magnitude 9.0 earthquake and tsunami on March 11 in Japan that disrupted supply chains.

Toyota's North American output fully recovered from that only in September.

"We still do not know about production from (Monday) October 31 ... as we have to watch the situation there," company spokeswoman Amiko Tomita said.

Toyota has already suspended its Thai plants and has been curbing production in Japan as the Southeast Asian nation was hit by its worst flooding in decades.

Thai authorities urged residents in flood-prone areas of Bangkok to evacuate Wednesday, warning them that the arrival of a massive deluge of water was imminent.

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Electromobility: New Components Going for a Test Run
Munich, Germany (SPX) Oct 25, 2011
The future belongs to electrical cars - that's what most experts think. Unfortunately, there are still a lot of problems that have not been solved. This is the reason why researchers at 33 Fraunhofer institutes put their heads together in the Fraunhofer System Research for Electromobility project to move electromobility one big step ahead. This two-year project was completed on July 30, 20 ... read more


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