Honda to Restart China Line After Parts Plant Strike
By wchung | 19 May, 2026
Honda Motor Co. said Monday that it hopes to resume stalled production at its auto factories in southern China by tomorrow following a strike at a crucial parts plant.
“We hope we can resume parts production as soon as possible, in the best case today, though it hasn’t re-started yet,” said Zhu Linjie, a company spokesman in Beijing.
“If we fail to restart operations today, it should be tomorrow,” Zhu said.
Zhu would not comment on the status of talks with workers at Honda Auto Parts Manufacturing Co., who went on strike May 17. The resulting lack of transmissions and engine parts forced Honda to shut production at its four assembly plants last week.
“Since the problem stems from demands for higher wages at our parts factory, we want to resume production there first. After that, perhaps one or two days later, our four car plants will get back to normal operations,” Zhu said.
The strike has affected two factories at the Guangqi Honda Automobile Co. joint venture in the southern city of Guangzhou, which make the Accord sedan and Odyssey minivan. Dongfeng Honda in central Hubei province, which produces the Civic and CRV SUV, also suspended output.
Guangzhou-based Honda Automobile China, which has a daily capacity of 120 Jazz models, was expected to partially resume operations and produce about 50 vehicles on Monday.
Honda’s parts factory, located in Guangdong province, employs 1,900 people.
SHANGHAI (AP)
Recent Articles
- Trump Signals Nuclear Deal Possible, Pauses Strikes
- Starbucks Korea Head Fired After Promotion Sparks Public Uproar
- Japan, China Led Declines in Foreign Holdings of Treasuries in March
- Elon Musk Loses Jury Trial Against OpenAI, Altman
- China's Economy Lost Steam in April as Consumption, Output Disappoint
- Nikka Bets Japanese Whisky Boom Has Room to Run
- Trump Got a Small Rare Earth Win but Failed to End China's Export Controls
- Xpeng Begins Mass Production of Robotaxis in Guangzhou
- Baidu Beats Q1 Revenue Estimates as AI Cloud Surge Offsets Ad Slump
- Musk Expects Widespread Use of Cars Without Human Monitors in 2026
