Ford halts F-150 production in Missouri, while GM pauses EV assembly

Ford Motor Co. will halt F-150 pickup truck production next week at its Kansas City Assembly Plant in Missouri and General Motors Co. is halting assembly of its all-electric Chevrolet Bolt because of the continuing global semiconductor shortage.

The scarcity of microchips used in consumer electronics, including vehicles’ assisted driving functions, emissions controls, infotainment and more, has wreaked havoc on automotive assembly over the course of the year. Toyota Motor Corp. on Thursday said it is scaling production back 40% as surging COVID-19 cases in Southeast Asia constrain part supplies.

Production of the F-150 pickup is being halted at Kansas City Assembly Plant in Missouri due to limited microchips.

And Volkswagen AG told Reuters it may have to reduce production in response to tight supply during the third quarter, though it expects conditions to improve before the end of the year.

Ford cited worsening pandemic conditions in Malaysia, where some chips are sourced, for the halted production. A Saturday super shift at Kansas City plant has been canceled for F-150 production, and it won’t resume until Aug. 30. Transit van production will continue. F-150 production in Dearborn remains unaffected.

The latest impacts on GM’s production do not hit its profit-heavy trucks or full-size SUVs, which it has aimed to protect from the shortage.

Electric vehicle production at Orion Assembly in Lake Orion, however, will be down for the next week. It builds the Chevrolet Bolt EV and EUV.

Other plants also are affected. Lansing Delta Township Assembly, home of the Chevrolet Traverse and Buick Enclave, adds downtime the weeks of Aug. 23 and Aug. 30. It is expected to resume production the week of Sept. 6 after being down since July 19.

Cadillac CT4 and CT5 production at Lansing Grand River Assembly Plant will be down through the week of Sept. 13. It’s been halted since May 10 and is expected to resume Sept. 20. Assembly of the Chevrolet Camaro remains running there, and the plant also supports limited Cadillac Black Wing production.

Spring Hill Assembly in Tennessee will take downtime the weeks of Aug. 23 and Aug. 30. Production of the Cadillac XT5, Cadillac XT6 and GMC Acadia is expected to resume Sept. 6.