Conti restarts tire production in Russia to protect local workers

FRANKFURT -- Continental said it has resumed production at its Russian plant in Kaluga to protect local workers who could otherwise face criminal charges.

"Our employees and managers in Russia face severe criminal consequences should we refrain from serving local demand," the German supplier said on Tuesday.

Continental did not elaborate on the potential charges staff might face.

"In order to protect our employees in Russia from prosecution, we are temporarily resuming the production of passenger tires for the local market at our tire plant in Kaluga if necessary," the supplier said.

"The basis for this step is the duty of care for our employees in Russia," the company said.

Continental said resumption in production was not a profit-driven decision.

Continental had said on March 8 said that production at the Kaluga plant had been suspended.

Continental, based in Hanover, Germany, ranks No. 6 on the Automotive News list of to…

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Man charged with vandalizing 116 vehicles at three dealerships near Chicago

A man was arrested after police said he destroyed the rear windows of more than 100 vehicles at three dealerships in suburban Chicago last week.

Andrew McAuliff allegedly broke onto the lots of Bob Rohrman Honda, Bob Rohrman Schaumburg Ford and Patrick BMW in Schaumburg, Ill., late Wednesday night, the Schaumburg Police Department said. All three dealerships were on the same two blocks.

He was caught at Bob Rohrman Ford by a security guard, who stopped him after he allegedly broke 19 rear windows with a blunt metal object, General Manager Alex Kaliakmanis told Automotive News.

Bob Rohrman Honda was hit the hardest, with more than 80 cars vandalized.

"Thank God we caught him before he got further than 19 vehicles," Kaliakmanis said. Preliminary estimates to repair the damaged vehicles are around $125,000, Kaliakmanis said.

A total of 116 cars at the three dealerships were vandalized, Schaumburg Lieutenant Christy Lindhurst said.

McAul…

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CDK’s plan to sell itself means more shuffling ahead in DMS market

There's a lot still unknown about CDK Global Inc.'s plan to sell itself to global investment firm Brookfield Business Partners — from the company's leadership structure and operations to how its dealership customers will respond.

CDK CEO Brian Krzanich, in a letter to employees this month disclosed in a federal regulatory filing, said that after the acquisition, "we will operate independently as a part of Brookfield and largely as we do today."

One significant change, however, will come when the deal, valued at $8.3 billion, closes this year: Dealership management system giant CDK no longer will list its stock on the Nasdaq exchange.

Analysts who follow CDK told me that the move could be a way for the company to invest in growth strategies without having to satisfy public company investors' growth expectations every quarter.

"Notably, this transaction aligns us with our peers, including Reynolds, Cox and Tekion, as a privately held company, which …

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Shanghai’s manufacturing plant restarts fall short due to lack of truckers, parts

Even those companies in China whose factories are operating under so-called closed-loop systems might be forced to stop work due to parts shortages or logistical challenges that make moving people and goods around the country near impossible, a European chamber of commerce has warned.

"A few companies are running in closed-loop production now. Those companies are facing challenges and may shut down very soon due to lack of logistics and workers," Maximilian Butek, chief representative at the Delegation of German Industry & Commerce in Shanghai said in a LinkedIn post Monday. "Their workers for closed-loop production have been working for more than three weeks and need to be replaced."

Butek added that most of his association's members can't "have production sites running since they cannot get raw materials delivered and cannot deliver their products to their customers. The logistics in Shanghai is not working."

Officials in China's financial hub have…

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2023 Toyota bZ4X: Charting a new green path

Toyota, the king of gasoline-electric hybrids, has long been skeptical of all-electric vehicles.

Their limited range and spotty charging station networks, along with doubts about profitability, rendered them impractical and nonviable, the company long thought. Toyota once offered a battery-electric RAV4, but only in California and only in volumes to meet state mandates for the sale of zero-emission vehicles.

So the new bZ4X, the first EV Toyota has designed from the ground up, though with a key partner, is a bit of game-changer for the company.

The bZ4X is the product of a joint venture between Toyota and Subaru, which is introducing the similar Solterra EV. The companies split engineering evenly, though the crossovers are built in a Toyota plant in Japan.

The bZ4X — the bZ nomenclature is shorthand for "beyond zero" and will be adopted on future Toyota electric models — is positioned between the RAV4 compact and Venza…

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Lexus shows off new RZ EV ahead of global premiere

Lexus revealed three images of the new 2023 RZ 450e electric compact crossover on its media site ahead of the vehicle's planned global reveal on Wednesday.

The images show a new design language from the luxury brand, including the equivalent of a filled-in spindle grille on Lexus' first battery-electric vehicle, as well as a severe rake to the rear hatch.

The RZ 450e appears similar in size to the bZ4X, the Toyota brand's first EV designed from the ground up.

Other images released by Lexus show a yoke-style steering wheel.

Full details are scheduled to be released at 6 a.m. EDT Wednesday as part of an online global reveal.

Lexus dealers are eager for the arrival of a BEV, giving them an option for luxury buyers looking to make the jump into fully electric propulsion.

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The 1980 Citation, Chevy’s first fwd car, goes on sale

The 1980 Chevrolet Citation, the brand's first front-wheel-drive car, debuts in U.S. showrooms on April 19, 1979, several months after production begins in Willow Run, Mich., ushering in an era of lighter, more spacious and fuel-efficient General Motors cars.

GM engineered and built the first modern American-made fwd cars in 1966 with the Oldsmobile Toronado and Cadillac Eldorado, but they had traditional longitudinally mounted engines.

The company had never designed anything like the Citation and its siblings — the Buick Skylark, Oldsmobile Omega and Pontiac Phoenix — with transverse-mounted engines and transmissions that powered the front wheels.

Engineering and design started on the X-car program in 1976, in large part in response to the Arab oil embargo and rising gasoline prices, as well as rising foreign imports. GM's fleet in the 1970s was still dominated by body-on-frame, rear-wheel-drive cars with longitudinally mounted e…

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Chevy plans new Trax subcompact crossover for 2023

Months after Chevrolet discontinues the current Trax subcompact crossover, the brand will launch a new Trax.

Chevy on Friday confirmed that production of the current model will end late this year. AutoForecast Solutions expects output to end in November.

The new model, like the current version, will be a gasoline-powered, small, entry-level crossover, Chevy spokeswoman Kellie Van Maele said.

Chevy plans to reveal the new Trax this year, and output is slated to begin in the first half of next year, she said.

U.S. sales of the Trax tallied 5,801 in the first quarter, a drop of 66 percent from a year earlier. The Trax ranked 15th out of 21 subcompact crossovers during the latest quarter, according to the Automotive News Research & Data Center.

Automotive News reported in March that General Motors would discontinue both the Trax and the Buick Encore subcompact crossovers, citing AutoForecast Solutions. Both crossovers are built in South Kor…

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Ford wins order for 750 E-Transit vans from Penske Truck Leasing

DETROIT — Penske Truck Leasing has ordered 750 Ford E-Transit electric cargo vans, the latest high-profile company to buy in following the vehicle's February launch.

Penske plans to take delivery of the first several vans in the coming weeks, it said in a release. Those vans will be made available to customers in Southern California, while customers elsewhere in the U.S. will have access to them later in the year for both short-term rentals and longer-term leases.

The company chose to order the vans after it received a preproduction model as well as access to telematics services late last year as part of Ford Motor Co.'s commercial business pilot program.

"We're excited to help bring these new vehicles to market as both a rental and full-service lease option for our customers," Art Vallely, president of Penske Truck Leasing, said in a statement. "We continue to expand and diversify our fleet of electric vehicles and to offer new options for customers se…

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Massive Stellantis-LG $4 billion EV battery plant in Canada will ‘create a new supply chain’

The $3.96-billion battery plant destined for Windsor, Ont., is the largest single automotive investment in Canadian history and is expected to spark the country’s electric-vehicle revolution with a new supply chain and thousands of jobs.

“I describe this as being as big as the transformation from the horseless carriage to the internal-combustion engine,” said Drew Dilkens, mayor of the city that will host Canada’s first large-scale battery factory.

“And, perhaps even larger when we consider the environmental factors.”

The plant is the result of a joint venture between Stellantis (49 percent) and South Korea-based LG Energy Solution (51 percent). It’s expected to employ about 3,200 people. At 4.5 million square feet it will be one of largest battery plants in North America.

The project and its details were announced at a March 23 press conference by senior company officials and government. Windsor assembled the land package for the site in the cit…

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Tesla’s conflicts with U.S. regulators coming to a head as safety crackdown looms

Derrick Monet and his wife, Jenna, were driving on an Indiana interstate in 2019 when their Tesla Model 3 sedan operating on Autopilot crashed into a parked fire truck. Derrick, then 25, sustained spine, neck, shoulder, rib and leg fractures. Jenna, 23, died at the hospital.

The incident was one of a dozen in the last four years in which Teslas using this driver-assistance system collided with first-responder vehicles, raising questions about the safety of technology the world’s most valuable car company considers one of its crown jewels.

Now, U.S. regulators are applying greater scrutiny to Autopilot than ever before. The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, which has the authority to force recalls, has opened two formal defect investigations that could ultimately lead Tesla Inc. to have to retrofit cars and restrict use of Autopilot in situations it still can’t safely handle.

A clampdown on Autopilot could tarnish Tesla’s reputation with co…

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