Ford, GE to produce 50,000 ventilators in 100 days
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[March 31, 2020]
By Nick Carey
DETROIT (Reuters) - Ford Motor Co said on
Monday it will produce 50,000 ventilators over the next 100 days at a
plant in Michigan in cooperation with General Electric's healthcare
unit, and can then build 30,000 per month as needed to treat patients
afflicted with the coronavirus.
Ford said the simplified ventilator design, which is licensed by GE
Healthcare from Florida-based Airon Corp and has been cleared by the
Food and Drug Administration, can meet the needs of most COVID-19
patients and relies on air pressure without the need for electricity.
Officials in states hard hit by the pandemic have pleaded with the Trump
administration and manufacturers to speed up production of ventilators
to cope with a surge in patients struggling to breathe. Hospitals in New
York already are using one ventilator to sustain two patients. New
Orleans has a fraction of the ventilators it needs for a surge of
COVID-19 patients, Louisiana officials said.
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On Friday, President Donald Trump said he would invoke powers under the
Defense Production Act to direct manufacturers, including Ford and
General Motors Co, to produce ventilators.
On Monday, the head of the United Auto Workers and other officials
compared the auto industry's effort to build ventilators to Detroit's
conversion to bomber production during the World War Two.
Ford said it plans to begin production of ventilators at a plant in
Ypsilanti, Michigan, deploying 500 United Auto Workers employees.
It said it plans to start production at the facility the week of April
20. That is roughly when New York officials expect the peak of COVID-19
cases to hit their state.
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Ventilators built by Ford, GM and others could be used in other
parts of the United States where the peak case loads are expected
later.
GM said Sunday it plans to produce up to 10,000 ventilators a month
by this summer at a plant in Kokomo, Indiana.
The Ypsilanti workers will be stationed at a safe distance apart and
will be screened for symptoms of coronavirus infection before they
enter the plant, Ford officials said.
"We're using and deploying a whole host of technologies to keep
workers safe," said Adrian Price, director of global manufacturing
core engineering for Ford. The safety procedures will be adapted
from work Ford and the UAW have been doing to prepare for the
automaker to reopen other U.S. factories, Price said.
Separately, GE and Ford engineers are working together to boost
production at a GE plant in Madison, Wisconsin, of a GE ventilator,
different from the model licensed from Airon.
GE expects to double ventilator output from the Wisconsin plant
during the second quarter, Tom Westrick, GE Healthcare's vice
president for quality, said during a call with reporters on Monday.
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(Reporting By Nick Carey; Editing by Dan Grebler)
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