. Earth Science News .
Analysis: European car sector needs cash

disclaimer: image is for illustration purposes only
by Stefan Nicola
Berlin (UPI) Nov 18, 2008
General Motors is not alone: European car companies are also in need of cash to avoid bankruptcy, with EU officials mulling continent-wide bailout plans.

In Germany and France, automobile manufacturers are suffering from dwindling sales because of the financial crisis.

Germany's Opel, a subsidiary of General Motors, asked Germany for more than $1 billion in credit guarantees. Another $1 billion is to be provided by governments of German states where Opel has plants, according to media reports.

After an emergency meeting Monday with officials from the car producer, German Chancellor Angela Merkel announced she would be willing to help Opel if it was indeed necessary.

"It's important �� that we try to support the auto industry,'' she announced over the weekend.

French Finance Minister Christine Lagarde on Monday called for national and European strategies to help the car sector. France has tens of thousands of jobs linked to automakers Peugeot and Renault.

Luxembourg's Prime Minister Jean-Claude Juncker in a newspaper interview together with German Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier said bailout plans should be drafted on an EU-wide level. Juncker said U.S. plans supported by President-elect Barack Obama to provide at least $25 billion in loans to the American car sector call for a European reaction.

"If the U.S. government rescues Ford, GM and Chrysler from bankruptcy with billions of dollars, then we can't simply watch and leave (car) producers in Europe alone," he told German daily newspaper Bild.

European automakers already have asked Brussels for 40 billion euros in low-interest loans to switch to more environmentally friendly cars.

Nearly 750,000 people currently work for automakers or their supplier companies in Germany, the continent's main automobile nation. Already, luxury brands such as Mercedes and BMW are battling lower demand in the United States. A bankruptcy of any German auto firm would have catastrophic consequences for Europe's largest economy, experts say.

Yet there remains some opposition to comprehensive bailout plans using taxpayers' money. Critics say money shouldn't be thrown at firms that have failed to adapt to new market realities; and it isn't and shouldn't be Berlin's responsibility to reverse consumer trends, they say.

Critics point to a failed car bailout -- that of British Leyland, a carmaker that received some $16.5 billion in government aid in the 1970s and 1980s before going out of business.

"The British Leyland experience is a relevant and cautionary one," John Casesa of the automotive consulting firm Casesa Shapiro Group in New York told The New York Times. "The government got in the business of trying to make a winner out of a structurally flawed company." That could be the risk in the United States and Europe as well.

Like virtually every automaker in Europe, Opel has been battling slow sales recently, but the current crisis is linked mainly to the financial problems of the mother company, analysts say. For years GM has produced gasoline-intense cars that by now have turned into shelf warmers.

Berlin has said any cash it hands out to Opel should stay in Germany, securing the estimated 100,000 jobs at Opel, supplier firms and affected companies.

Merkel on Monday invited Opel Managing Director Hans Demant, GM Europe head Carl-Peter Forster and Klaus Franz, Opel's top employee representative, to the Chancellery for crisis talks.

Opel over the past few days asked for help to stem the crisis from Berlin and several state governments where the company has plants. The loan guarantees are only a "protective network" for the "absolutely unrealistic event" that Opel can't pay its bills, Forster said.

And even if that event became reality, European history also has positive bailout examples. France in the 1980s spent some $5 billion to save ailing Renault. Today, the automaker is among the most profitable in Europe.

Share This Article With Planet Earth
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit
YahooMyWebYahooMyWeb GoogleGoogle FacebookFacebook



Related Links
Car Technology at SpaceMart.com



Memory Foam Mattress Review
Newsletters :: SpaceDaily :: SpaceWar :: TerraDaily :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News


Group says link auto aid to efficiency
Cambridge, Mass. (UPI) Nov 18, 2008
Any financial aid to U.S. automakers should be tied to better fuel efficiency to boost energy independence and the economy, a scientific organization said.







  • Thousands displaced in Indonesia as quake toll hits six
  • Death toll from China subway collapse rises to seven: state press
  • Quake threat to Karachi exposes cracks in system
  • Three dead, 18 missing in China tunnel collapse: media

  • Obama vows to engage world on climate change
  • Somalians face famine on massive scale: Red Cross
  • Humidity increases greenhouse gas warming
  • Global Warming Predicted To Hasten Carbon Release From Peat Bogs

  • Firefly CubeSat To Study Link Between Lightning And Terrestrial Gamma Ray Flashes
  • Measuring Water From Space
  • Orbital Ships NASA's Orbiting Carbon Observatory Satellite To Launch Site
  • Arctic Sea Ice Decline Shakes Up Ocean Ecosystems

  • China to build new oil, gas pipeline across Myanmar: state media
  • China to reform oil prices in 20 days: state media
  • Record Set For Fuel-Cell-Powered, Radio-Controlled Airplane Flight
  • First Wind Begins Construction On Milford Wind Corridor Project

  • Purdue Researcher Invents Molecule That Stops SARS
  • TB strains more drug-resistant, WHO says
  • Airport Malaria Causing Concern In The US
  • AIDS vaccines: New hope for problem-plagued path

  • Fiddler Crabs Reveal Honesty Is Not Always The Best Policy
  • Botswana wildlife threatened by human encroachment
  • Africa in biggest ever crackdown on wildlife crime
  • Guerillas threaten gorillas in Africa's oldest national park

  • Pollution Of Freshwater Costs The USA At Least $4.3 Billion Annually
  • Italian police find massive illegal waste dump near Naples
  • White House defends last-minute deregulation push
  • Smelly effluent mars affluent Dubai's beaches

  • Parents clasp hands of children in ancient graves
  • Surprising Effects Of Climate Patterns In Ancient China
  • Firms scan brain waves to improve ads in Japan
  • China's media workers not in good physical shape: report

  • The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2007 - SpaceDaily.AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by SpaceDaily on any Web page published or hosted by SpaceDaily. Privacy Statement