GE adds new plants to heat up refrigerator business

Automatic Washer - The world's coolest Washing Machines, Dryers and Dishwashers

Help Support :

supersuds

Well-known member
Platinum Member
Joined
Jul 3, 2007
Messages
1,847
Location
Knoxville, Tenn.
From CNBC:

GE plans to spend $432 million to establish four U.S.-based refrigeration design and manufacturing centers that will be the focus for its new energy efficient line of refrigerators and other appliances.

GE says it will make significant capital investments in its appliances division.

General Electric said Monday the move will create 500 new jobs by 2014 and help preserve another 1,166 existing positions.

GE said its investment is an effort to revitalize its appliance business and take advantage of increasing global competitiveness of U.S. factories.

The centers will be at existing locations in Louisville, Ky.; Bloomington, Ind.; Decatur, Ala., and Selmer, Tenn.

The new refrigeration centers will bring product design teams and manufacturing operations together to streamline design and production using lean manufacturing processes. GE said this will drive down costs by making the manufacturing process more efficient and improve product quality.

At its Louisville location, GE will invest $194 million and create 300 jobs to establish a center for bottom-freezer refrigerators, a new product for that facility.

The Bloomington facility, which had been scheduled to close, will receive $93 million in investment and create 200 jobs to become GE's home base for new side-by-side refrigerators.

In Decatur, Ala., where GE's popular top-freezer models are made, GE will invest $43 million to create a center for top-freezers and "green" manufacturing. Coupled with $16 million spent earlier this year on a new product insulation process, GE said the combined $59 million investment will help retain the more than 1,000 jobs at the site.

GE's Monogram Refrigeration unit in Selmer, Tenn., will receive $32 million to redesign the built-in refrigeration line made there. It said that will help retain the 166 jobs there.

GE has been focusing on making products ranging from wind and natural gas turbines to sonogram machines to energy-efficient appliances, while it de-emphasizes its finance unit, GE Capital. That unit accounted for more than half of GE's profit in 2006 during a boom in financial services, but recorded billions in write-offs when the economy went into recession.

So far the results are mixed. While GE has struggled to grow sales, its order book is showing signs of life. Overall, U.S. production of appliances is still weak because of its close relationship to the beleaguered housing market.

 
It is good news--and I do remember the talk about selling the GE appliance division off.

At that time, I felt the attempt to sell was one of those things that make American business so bad--the limited vision for short term profit vs. the long term. Appliance sales might be down--which is one issue I recall--but it's reasonable to think they'll improve. Even if the economy never improves--which seems, in my more pessimistic moments, to be a quite likely scenario--there should be at least some sales since people will still need washers, refrigerators, etc.

One can complain about GE appliances. I have heard numerous horror stories about their recent washers and refrigerators, although I'm not sure they are necessarily worse than others. But the reality is: quality can be improved, and better designs released. Selling GE appliances off to China (a likely scenario, many thought) can't be undone so readily.
 
Very happy

They're keeping jobs in the United States and they are investing in modernization and focusing on smart-grid technologies.
Good for them... and us! They're engineering products at both ends of the AC line and that means advancements in energy usage.
For ONCE a company decides to SAVE rather than DUMP an American manufacturing division. And I hope that they promote this decision heavily in the media. GE products need the consumer's loyalty in response to GE's loyalty to the USA's appliance manufacturing business.
 
This news actually makes me want to purchase GE appliances next time around. I'm thinking an electric range will be first---they're always at or near the top of CR's reviews, and AW family members like Kelly, who cook a lot, have attested to their quality. As I've gotten older, the bottom-freezer and/or French door refrigerators look increasingly enticing. That would probably be the 2nd purchase.

Are their ranges manufactured in the US?

Wonder if they will ever move their front-load washer division to the US? I'm just not into the impeller/wash plate machines.
 
I heard once that all the GE ranges are made in Mexico, but haven't confirmed that. Consumer Reports seems to like them. Range production in Louisville stopped in 1998, as I recall.

It would be nice if they made a front loading washer here, instead of selling that Chinese thing.
 
I could be wrong, but i think GE received US funding as an incentive to develop the "Geotherm" water heater in the U.S. and thats a good thing. The tags on many electronics in the 70's and 80's read something like, Assembled in the U.S.A with parts manufactured in Japan (or some other country). I agree its a start in the right direction. alr2903
 

Latest posts

Back
Top