Ford CEO accuses UAW of holding labor deal hostage due to battery plant uncertainty

Ford CEO accuses UAW of holding labor deal hostage due to battery plant uncertainty

WASHINGTON,⁣ Sept 29 (Reuters) – Ford Motor (F.N)⁤ Chief Executive Jim Farley on Friday accused the United Auto Workers union of holding up a new U.S. labor agreement in a‍ bid ⁣to force the automaker to​ pay ⁢workers at new battery plants⁢ the same top wages ‌as workers at assembly plants.Farley also disclosed the automaker is‌ awaiting “final language” from the U.S. Treasury on whether batteries made at a planned Michigan plant using Chinese technology will qualify for tax credits.”The UAW is holding the deal hostage over battery plants,” Farley said, and claimed a “bad deal” could threaten ​financial viability of some U.S. vehicle production. .UAW President Shawn Fain​ said Farley was not telling the truth ‌about the negotiations‌ and said⁣ the sides were⁢ far apart on core economic proposals including “job security in this EV⁤ transition, which Farley himself says is going to cut 40% ​of our ⁢members’ jobs.”On Monday, Ford said it had paused ‍work‌ on its $3.5 billion Marshall, Michigan battery‍ plant‌ that will use technology licensed ⁣from Chinese battery company CATL ‌(300750.SZ), citing concerns about its ability to operate competitively.In 2022, Congress passed the Inflation ⁢Reduction Act (IRA) ⁣barring $7,500 in future⁤ consumer EV tax credits if any battery components‌ are manufactured or assembled​ by a “foreign entity ‌of concern.”Ford is awaiting guidance⁤ to determine if batteries produced by the Marshall plant would meet the requirements. “We can ‍make Marshall a lot bigger or a lot smaller,” Farley said.On Sept. 8, Ford wrote Treasury ​Secretary Janet Yellen and Energy⁣ Secretary Jennifer Granholm warning⁢ that an​ unfavorable interpretation⁢ of the foreign entity provision would lead the automaker⁢ to make “fewer batteries in Michigan,⁢ shrinking that⁢ project and affecting⁢ the volume at EV assembly plants outside of ‌Michigan. ‍This will mean‌ fewer U.S. jobs.”This week, ‍the chairs ‌of three U.S. House committees demanded ​Ford​ turn over documents tied to the CATL partnership.Republican lawmakers have been probing Ford’s battery⁤ plant plan ⁤for months over concerns it could send U.S.⁣ tax subsidies to China and leave ⁤Ford dependent on Chinese technology.Reporting by David Shepardson
Editing by Chris Reese and David GregorioOur Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles. Acquire Licensing Rights, opens new tab

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