The post Japan’s Toyota Factory Failure Halts Production at 12 Plants appeared first on Industry Leaders Magazine.
]]>Toyota’s factory failure due to malfunction has made the company look into the cause of the problem, a spokesperson said, adding it was “likely not due to a cyberattack”. The malfunction has meant it has not been able to order components, the spokesperson added.
Toyota production is shutting down at 12 of its plants from Tuesday morning, with two remaining online. All 14 will be suspended from the second shift on Tuesday, the spokesperson said, adding the amount of lost output due to Japan Toyota system failure was unclear.
The 14 plants altogether account for around a third of Toyota’s global production. It is the world’s largest automaker by sales.
Toyota plants outage comes as Toyota’s Japanese production had been on the rebound after a series of reduced output plans it had blamed on semiconductor shortages. Production in Japan was up 29% in the first half of the year, the first such increase in two years.
Daily production in Japan for Toyota brands, excluding Daihatsu and Hino, averaged about 13,500 vehicles in the first half, as per a report.
Toyota’s production was shut down or a halt for a day last year when one of its suppliers was hit by a cyberattack. That one-day disruption caused an output loss of around 13,000 cars.
The automaker is a pioneer of the just-in-time inventory management, which keeps down costs but also means that a snarl in the logistics chain can put production at risk.
Toyota factory failure cause was not clear, corporate Japan has been on alert in recent days as some businesses and government offices reported a flood of harassing phone calls.
The government has said the calls were likely from China and related to Japan’s release of treated radioactive water from the Fukushima nuclear power plant into the Pacific.
Shares of Toyota were down 0.3% at 2,429 yen in early Tokyo trade.
The post Japan’s Toyota Factory Failure Halts Production at 12 Plants appeared first on Industry Leaders Magazine.
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