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		GM halts operations at 11 Michigan plants 
		after utility's urgent appeal 
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		 [January 31, 2019] 
		By David Shepardson 
 WASHINGTON (Reuters) - General Motors Co 
		said late on Wednesday it will temporarily suspend operations at 11 
		Michigan plants and its Warren Tech Center after a utility made an 
		emergency appeal to users to conserve natural gas during extreme winter 
		cold.
 
 Fiat Chrysler Automobiles NV also said it had canceled a shift on 
		Thursday at both its Warren Truck and Sterling Heights Assembly plants 
		and was considering whether it would need to cancel additional shifts.
 
 GM said it had been asked by Consumers Energy, a unit of CMS Energy 
		Corp, to suspend operations to allow the utility to manage supply issues 
		after extreme cold temperatures and a fire at a compressor station.
 
 
		
		 
		It said workers were told not to report for the shifts at its Orion 
		Assembly, Flint Assembly, Lansing Delta Township Assembly and Lansing 
		Grand River Assembly plants, as well as other stamping and transmission 
		plants on Wednesday evening and early Thursday. GM said it was still 
		assessing when employees could return to work.
 
 Workers at its Warren Tech Center were also told to stay home on 
		Thursday.
 
 In a video message posted on Facebook, CMS Energy Chief Executive 
		Patricia Poppe said large companies, including Fiat Chrysler, Ford Motor 
		Co and GM, had agreed to "interrupt" production schedules through Friday 
		to tackle the issue prompted by a fire at a Michigan facility and the 
		record-breaking cold.
 
 Poppe said the usage cuts by large businesses were not enough, and urged 
		1.8 million Michigan customers to turn down thermostats as much as they 
		could to cut natural gas use in order to protect critical facilities 
		like hospitals and nursing homes. "I need you to take action right now," 
		she said.
 
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			A 2017 Chevrolet Bolt EV (L) and a 2017 Chevrolet Sonic vehicle are 
			displayed outside the General Motors Orion Assembly plant in Orion 
			Township, Michigan, U.S., June 13, 2017. REUTERS/Rebecca Cook 
            
 
            Ford Motor said it had also taken steps to reduce energy use at its 
			four Michigan plants supplied by Consumers Energy, but added the 
			situation remained fluid.
 A spokeswoman said it had reduced heating levels at Livonia 
			Transmission and Van Dyke Transmission, stopped heat treatment 
			processes at Sterling Axle and shut down the paint process at 
			Michigan Assembly.
 
 Consumers Energy sent an alert to mobile phones in Michigan asking 
			residents to reduce natural gas use.
 
 In a Twitter message, Consumers Energy warned that "without 
			additional reductions, we run the risk of not being able to deliver 
			natural gas to families and critical facilities across Michigan – a 
			scenario none of us want to encounter."
 
 Consumers Energy said a fire at a gas compressor station in 
			Michigan's Macomb County Wednesday forced it to halt gas flow from 
			the compressor station until safety and damage assessments could be 
			completed.
 
 (Reporting by David Shepardson; Editing by Clarence Fernandez and 
			Muralikumar Anantharaman)
 
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