Toyota ends production in Australia after 54 years

File picture: Mick Tsikas / Reuters.

File picture: Mick Tsikas / Reuters.

Published Oct 3, 2017

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Sydney - Toyota will shut down its plant in Melbourne on

Tuesday after manufacturing cars in Australia for over 50 years,

resulting in the loss of some 2600 jobs.

Victorian Industry Minister Wade Noonan said it was "a terribly sad

day" and "an end of an era for manufacturing" in the state.

Trade union leader Dave Smith told reporters outside the Toyota

factory at Altona North, where the final Camry was set to roll off

the production line on Tuesday, the event was a "very tragic day for

Victoria because today marks the end of the car manufacturing

industry."

Toyota, which began manufacturing in Australia in 1963, is the second

car company to shut down in Australia in two years. Ford ceased

production in Victoria's Geelong after 91 years last year.

Matthew Kinson, who worked at the Toyota plant for 19 years, said

workers will mark the closure with a private barbecue.

"A lot of us haven't had a job interview here for 20-odd years... So

that's going to be a little bit difficult because the reality of that

is hard," he told Australian broadcaster ABC.

"But I'm not concerned that people won't find work coming from here."

The worker's union said as many as 2600 workers may not be able to

find new jobs, despite Toyota's job skills training program.

Smith said just 35 percent of Ford's workers had found permanent,

full-time work.

Noonan said the state government had been preparing for the closure,

spending more than 100 million dollars on

assistance programs for the workers.

General Motors is is also planning to shut its

South Australia plant on October 20, marking the end of all car

manufacturing in Australia.

DPA

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