Toyota to build Prius in Mississippi / Tundra and Sequoia production will be idled for three months

Toyota to build Prius in Mississippi

Tundra and Sequoia production will be idled for three months

Lindsay Chappell Automotive News July 10, 2008 - 9:23 am ET

Toyota Motor Corp. today revealed that it has scrambled its manufacturing plans to produce fewer light trucks and more hybrid cars in the United States.

Toyota said it will build the hot-selling Prius hybrid at its Tupelo, Miss., factory in late 2010, scrubbing a plan to make the next-generation Highlander crossover there.

Instead, the Highlander will be added to Toyota's underutilized truck plant in Princeton, Ind. Toyota also will suspend all production of Tundra pickups and Sequoia SUVs from Aug. 8 until November.

When production resumes, all Tundra output will be consolidated at the San Antonio plant.

PRESS RELEASE: Toyota to Build Prius in U.S.

Highlander to Indiana; all Tundra to Texas

ERLANGER, Ky., July 10 /PRNewswire-FirstCall/ -- Toyota is responding to changes in consumer demand and improving the production efficiency and stability of its North American operations by adjusting production mix at three plants. The changes include the addition of the Prius hybrid sedan to its North American lineup.

The changes are as follows:

-- Prius will be built at a plant under construction in Blue Springs, Miss. Production is scheduled to begin in late 2010. Prius, which will join the Kentucky-built Camry Hybrid as the second Toyota hybrid built in North America, enables Toyota to better respond to increased consumer demand for hybrid vehicles.

-- The Highlander mid-size SUV, originally scheduled to be built in Mississippi, will now be manufactured in Princeton, Ind., beginning in Fall 2009.

-- Production of the Tundra full-size pick-up truck, currently built in Indiana and Texas, will be consolidated at the San Antonio plant in Spring 2009.

In addition, Toyota will temporarily suspend Tundra and Sequoia production beginning August 8 due to the declining overall market for full size trucks and SUVs. Production is scheduled to resume in early November. Team members at both facilities, as well as the Huntsville, Ala. plant that builds Tundra and Sequoia engines, will continue to be provided work.

"The truck market continues to worsen, so unfortunately we must temporarily suspend production. But this good news about production mix demonstrates our long-term commitment to our North American operations and to our team members, supplier partners, and communities where our plants are located," said Jim Wiseman, vice president/external affairs for Toyota Motor Engineering & Manufacturing North America (TEMA). "By using this downturn as an opportunity to develop team members and improve our operations, we hope to emerge even stronger."

Toyota (NYSE:TM) established operations in North America in 1957 and currently operates 13 manufacturing plants. In addition, new plants are under construction in Ontario and Mississippi. Toyota directly employs over 43,000 in North America and its investment here is currently valued at more than $21 billion, including sales and manufacturing operations, research and development, financial services and design. Toyota's annual purchasing of parts, materials, goods and services from North American suppliers totals more than $30 billion per year. For more information about Toyota, visit

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Reply to
C. E. White
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It will be nice to have a hybrid that is at least assembled in the US. Sales of the all new Tundra have been dismal from the start, but now they are in the dumper. Toyota made a lot of smart moves over the years by moving its vehicles upscale, adding luxury cars and SUVs to follow the domestics to were the market was going.

Tundra was the wrong vehicle, at the wrong price, at the wrong time. American truck buyers are a different breed than American car buyers, they want American trucks not simple one merely assembled in the US of mostly imported parts and materials.

The Tundra has been heavily discounted since introduction, up as high as $9,000. Thousands of brand new trucks were dumped, at thousands less than invoice at the Manheim auctions in and effort to make the sales numbers look better for the past two years to no avail.

Since Toyota sell vehicles to distributers, not franchise dealers as do domestic manufactures, they can sell directly to Fleets. They were offering huge discounts but there were few or any takers. The only fleet that bought them were the rental companies.

Toyota discounted a bunch of the slower selling Camry Solaras to the rental car companies as well, to keep the Accord from taking the top selling car spot.

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Reply to
Mike hunt

Like the F150?

Reply to
Fuller Wrath

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