BERLIN -- Opel will not split off its German factories from its operations, and production at its Eisenach plant will resume in January, Opel owner Stellantis and union IG Metall said on Wednesday, easing fears ovee the brand's future.
Stellantis also said that the Grandland SUV, which was temporarily produced in France when Eisenach was shut down in September will be made exclusively in the German factory from the new year.
German unions and politicians in the states have criticized Stellantis' communication on its plans for the two factories, in Ruesselsheim and Eisenach. They said it had not been made clear whether the plants would be legally split off from Opel and if Grandland production would return to Eisenach.
Stellantis had said in September that a split-off structure could be more efficient and flexible after German newspaper Handelsblatt reported this was under consideration.
IG Metall said in a statement on Wednesday that the works council and union representatives had agreed that such a split was "off the table."
Eisenach will become its own company within Opel Automobile GmbH, while Ruesselsheim's legal structure will remain as it is, the union added.
"The outsourcing and break-up of Opel was prevented and employment secured. I hope that management will steer the company more constructively and transparently into the future from now on," Joerg Koehlinger of IG Metall said.
Stellantis, formed this year by the merger of Fiat Chrysler Automobiles and PSA Group, confirmed the news.
An Opel supplier in France told Reuters earlier this week that it had received orders to supply parts for the Grandland to Eisenach and was told by Stellantis that production would start again there by February.