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Most Japanese Automakers Resume Production in Wake of Snowstorm

 

TOKYO, Feb 18 (Reuters) - Most Japanese car makers including Toyota Motor Corp have resumed operations at their plants that were suspended after heavy snow disrupted parts deliveries, companies said on Tuesday, limiting impact on their domestic production volume.

But Mazda Motor Corp said it suspended operations on Tuesday morning at its plant in Hiroshima as parts deliveries were delayed and Nissan Motor Co said operations at one of its plants were still stalled.

Heavy snow around Japan has closed many roads, disrupting the delivery of goods and suspending car production for one or more days at Toyota, Nissan, Honda Motor Co, Suzuki Motor Corp, Mazda and Subaru maker Fuji Heavy Industries Ltd as they rush to meet strong demand for cars ahead of a sales tax hike in April.

"It may be difficult to fully catch up on the lost production volume, though that is up to how much the companies can operate their plants on the weekends," said Satomi Hamada, a senior analyst at IHS Automotive.

There will be little impact on domestic sales, she added, because car makers are likely to focus on making vehicles for the domestic market to meet strong demand rather than for exports.

Toyota resumed operations on Tuesday at all four plants affected by the weather, including the Tsutsumi plant where it makes the popular Prius hybrid, spokeswoman Kayo Doi said.

The four plants account for about 30 percent of Toyota's Japanese production and about 60 percent of vehicles made at the four plants are exported, according to an estimate by IHS Automotive's Hamada.

Honda, Suzuki and Fuji Heavy also resumed operations on Tuesday at their suspended plants, company spokespeople said. Fuji Heavy said it is still undecided on plans for Wednesday.