Transportation

Ford will make ventilators for GE, joining General Motors


Ford is the latest automaker to announce that it will start making desperately needed ventilators that are crucial for treating the worst symptoms of COVID-19. The automaker announced Monday that it will manufacture ventilators for General Electric’s health care division, which has licensed a “simplified” design that does not need electricity from a Florida ventilator company called Airon. Ford has already been working with GE to increase Airon’s production and is helping make masks and protective hoods for health care workers.

Ford will pay 500 United Auto Workers-represented volunteer employees to build the ventilators at one of the automaker’s components factories in Ypsilanti, Michigan, which is currently shut down due to the novel coronavirus pandemic. The company will build the ventilators “around the clock” starting the week of April 20th. Ford says it expects to be able to build 1,500 of them by the end of April, 12,000 by the end of May, and 50,000 by July, eventually reaching a rate of 30,000 per month.

Ford joins fellow Detroit automaker General Motors in helping make ventilators, which are expected to be in short supply as the number of COVID-19 cases continues to rise in the US and around the world. GM announced on Friday that it will start manufacturing ventilators in April on behalf of Ventec Life Systems, hours before President Trump announced he was invoking the Korean War-era Defense Production Act to force the automaker to help with the shortage.

Tesla is also examining how to help manufacture ventilators and has even bought some from China to send to hospitals in the meantime. Earlier Monday, the rocket-launching arm of Richard Branson’s space company announced it has also developed a device that could help patients who are having trouble breathing due to COVID-19.

In response to the need for ventilators, as well as the economic impact of the pandemic, a number of workers in GE’s aviation division decided to stop work on Monday to protest cuts the company has made. The union workers called on the company to let them make ventilators instead. GE Healthcare is already a large manufacturer of ventilators.

When asked why GE Healthcare is tapping Ford to make these ventilators, Tom Westrick, the division’s vice president and chief quality officer said: “Our decision to select Ford was based specifically on speed, and our ability to increase capacity as fast as we could.”

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