Earlier this month, Honda announced plans to close its Swindon, U.K., factory that builds Civic hatchbacks for the U.S. At the time, Honda said it may shift Civic hatchback production to North America, but now it’s official. As Automotive News reports, Honda will use its U.S. and Canadian plants to build the next-generation Civic.
“Given our efforts to optimize production allocation and production capacity on a global scale, we have concluded that we will produce the Civic for North America in North America,” Honda CEO Takahiro Hachigo told Automotive News.
Considering Honda had to import almost a third of the Civics it sold in the U.S. last year, that sounds like a smart decision. But even though the timing of the announcement coincides with the deadline for Brexit, Honda still insists that’s not the reason it’s moving production out of the U.K. The decision is part of a plan to restructure Honda’s global production network to use existing factories at their full capacity, build more cars in the markets where they’re most popular, and speed up its electrification efforts. By 2030, Honda believes hybrid and fully electric vehicles can make up a full two-thirds of total sales.
“We will create electrification technologies at our Yorii plant and will introduce such technologies horizontally in the U.S., Japan, and China, where we can expect sales volume,” Hachigo said. “Then we will utilize those technologies on a global basis.”
Source: Automotive News (Subscription required)
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