Filed under: Plants/Manufacturing, Hyundai, Kia
2011 Hyundai Elantra / Avante - Click above for high-res image gallery
The
Hyundai Elantra is currently produced in Ulsan, South Korea, with about 100,000 of those vehicles earmarked for the U.S. each year. But while the Elantra is currently
Hyundai's most successful export product, word on the street is that production of the affordable compact could come to the Korean automaker's Montgomery, Alabama plant in April, 2011, with volumes reaching 150,000 units per year.
Wards Automotive reports that Hyundai is considering the move, though Hyundai was quick to tell the auto-focused publication that no decision has been made. To make room for the Elantra, Hyundai could consider moving
Santa Fe production to
Kia's West Pointe, GA plant. But while Hyundai has the available production capacity here in the U.S., the Elantra's 2.0-liter engine would still likely need to be made in China and exported to the States.
If Hyundai does indeed bring Elantra production to the U.S., it would likely mean more high paying manufacturing jobs at a time when high-paying jobs are very tough to find, and that certainly wouldn't suck.
[Source:
Wards Automotive]
Hyundai pondering U.S. Elantra production? originally appeared on Autoblog on Thu, 13 May 2010 18:30:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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