
UPDATED: 5/16/18 6:07 pm ET
Ford Motor Co. will restart production of the F-150 pickup at a Dearborn, Mich., factory Friday after more than a week of downtime resulting from a fire at a key supplier plant in mid-Michigan.
The F-150 production at a Kansas City, Mo., plant and Super Duty production at its Kentucky Truck Plant near Louisville will resume by Monday. About 7,600 workers who build the F-150 had been placed on temporary layoff while output was suspended; workers who built the Super Duty continued working, building different vehicles at the Kentucky plant.
Ford said it will see an adverse impact on second-quarter earnings of between 12-14 cents per share because of the lost F-150 and Super Duty production. Its full-year guidance remains unchanged at between $1.45 to $1.70 per share.
The fire at the supplier plant broke out early on May 3 and F-150 production at Ford's Kansas City factory went down May 7 and the Dearborn factory was idled May 9.
"Faced with unexpected adversity, the Ford team, including our global supply partners, showed unbelievable resiliency, turning a devastating event into a shining example of teamwork," Hau Thai-Tang, Ford's executive vice president of product development and purchasing, said in a statement. "Thanks to their heroic efforts, we are resuming production of some of our most important vehicles ahead of our original targets."
The fire at Meridian Magnesium Products of America in Eaton Rapids, Mich., has across the auto industry. Ford was the first automaker on-site at the supplier, roughly 24 hours after the fire.
It was able to enter the heavily damaged supplier plant first because it brought along Walbridge, a key construction supplier, who was able to assess the structural integrity of the building.
A work crew located all 19 of Ford's tools -- undamaged -- and extracted them over 48 hours. Ford said one die weighing 87,000 pounds was moved from Eaton Rapids to Nottingham, U.K., using an Antonov cargo plane, one of just 21 in the world that can handle such payloads, in just 30 hours door to door.
Ford said it transported the die from mid-Michigan and shipped it from an air field in Ohio and received a U.K. import license for the die just two hours before the plane touched down. The whole process would typically take 10 days, Thai-Tang said.
“The amount of team work and human ingenuity … shows you what the global Ford team can do when we work together,” Joe Hinrichs, Ford’s president of global operations, said on a conference call with reporters Wednesday.
Meridian now is producing parts for the F-150 at two locations -- Eaton Rapids and Nottingham. Production of bolsters for the Super Duty also is restarting at the Eaton Rapids plant.
Meridian makes three parts for Ford, including the bolsters to reinforce the radiator on the F-150 and Super Duty pickups as well as some large SUVs.
Hinrichs declined to say how many pickups Ford lost during the downtime, although James Albertine, an analyst with Consumer Edge Research, last week estimated it could lose as many as 15,000 pickups a week.
Ford plans to make up for some of the lost production by shortening a planned summer shutdown at the Dearborn and Kansas City plants to one week from the usual two weeks, Hinrichs said. Additionally, workers will be given the opportunity for voluntary overtime.
Ford had an 84-day supply of F-series pickups at the beginning of May and Hinrichs has said the incident will have no negative impact on sales. U.S. sales of the F series are up 4.1 percent this year through April.
The fire also affected General Motors, Fiat Chrysler Automobiles, Mercedes-Benz U.S. International Inc. and BMW of North America, although they declined to say how long output of some vehicles, including the Chrysler Pacifica, Chevrolet Express, and BMW X5 and X6 could be slowed.