| 25 April |
The Volcanic Ash Cloud Might Halt US BMW Production |
The recent volcanic activity of Eyjafjalajokull filled the skies around Iceland and Europe with a huge ash cloud that could halt production of BMW automobiles at the US company’s factory in Spartanburg, South Carolina, reports AutoNews.com. If trans-Atlantic flights continue to be delayed for two additional days, says BMW spokesman Mathias Schmidt, the German automaker will be unable to supply the necessary transmissions to assemble X5 and X6 sport utility vehicles.
BMW hurting because of ash cloud?
If you think BMW’s bottom line would be hurt be a production layoff, imagine what the ash clouds from Eyjafjalajokull are doing to the airline industry and what a possible Hekla eruption could do. {According to the BBC, the International Air Transport Association finds that airlines are losing around $ 300 million per day total due to flights canceled because of the ash cloud}. Billions of dollars might be lost if this continues for weeks. As many as 63,000 flights have been canceled since the eruption chain created the ash cloud on April 14. If the BMW plant in Spartanburg were to completely shut down, the company would be losing out on the production of around 600 vehicles per day, split between the X6 and X5 (numbers estimated by BMW). Due to the restricted air travel, a press trip to BMW factory in Shenyang, China was also called off.
America has been good to BMW in 2010
According to Bloomberg, the U.S. was BMW’s biggest market in the first two months of 2010, so shutting down X5 and X6 production will be noticed. The X5 line is considered to be BMW’s “luxury SUV” class. Variants include the X5 xDrive30i, xDrive48i and turbo diesel xDrive35d. The X6 line is the “first ever sports activity coupe,” according to BMW. Model production affected by the ash cloud would include the ActiveHybrid X6, X6 xDrive35i and X6 xDrive50i.