Toyota and Mazda have chosen Alabama as the winner in a multi-state contest for a joint car factory worth $1.6 billion, Bloomberg and Reuters reported Tuesday, citing sources familiar with the negotiations. Alabama reportedly edged out North Carolina to get the plant after the Japanese sifted through proposals for months. Mazda and Toyota planned to announce the decision Wednesday in Montgomery, Alabama's capital. They plan to open the shared factory in 2021. It will employ up to 4,000 people and produce about 300,000 vehicles a year. It will be the first new auto assembly plant announced under President Trump, who has pressured manufacturers to create jobs in the U.S. by building more plants in the U.S. for cars to be sold here. Source: Bloomberg, Reuters |
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