Toyota Will Spend $374 Million on Five U.S. Plants - Think Hybrids and Camrys

Timothy Cain
by Timothy Cain

Toyota announced yesterday that its plans to invest $10 billion in the United States, revealed earlier this year, will grow by another $374 million with big spending at five different factories in five different states.

Kentucky, Tennessee, West Virginia, Alabama, and Missouri will all benefit. Though it’s unlikely the investments will directly translate to much in the way of new employment — Toyota promises 50 new jobs in Alabama — Toyota says “these investments will help to ensure the stability of the plants’ employment levels in the future.”

At the core of the investments? Toyota is spending money to enable greater production of the new TNGA 2018 Toyota Camry’s 2.5-liter engines and hybrid transaxles. Why America? “The investment is part of our long-term commitment to build more vehicles and components in the markets in which we sell them.”

Toyota sells 200,000 vehicles per month in the United States.

Toyota’s Georgetown, Kentucky, facility will receive nearly $121 million in order to expand capacity for 2.5-liter engines.

The Jackson, Tennessee facility will benefit from $14.5 million to “accomodate production of hybrid transaxle cases and houses” plus engine blocks for the 2.5-liter four-cylinder engine.

In Buffalo, West Virginia, $115 million will allow production of hybrid transaxles.

Huntsville, Alabama’s Toyota plant requires $106 million so it can build engines associated with the Toyota New Global Architecture.

In the Toyota plant in Troy, Missouri, $17 million will be invested to facilitate the build of more heads for the 2.5-liter engine.

Much of this supports the plan to build more hybrid vehicles for America. Perceived by some to be an unnecessary stop-gap on the way to a fully electric fleet, Toyota believes in providing customers with the vehicles customers actually want to buy. To date, that has required expansions at pickup truck plants in Texas and Tijuana. But it also entails the building of more vehicles like the Toyota Highlander Hybrid, which Toyota made much more affordable earlier this year.

As a result, Highlander Hybrid sales have tripled to 11,099 units in America this year, according to HybridCars.com. Overall, Toyota and Lexus own 49 percent of the U.S. market for hybrids and plug-in hybrids through 2017’s first eight months.

[Images: Toyota]

Timothy Cain is a contributing analyst at The Truth About Cars and Autofocus.ca and the founder and former editor of GoodCarBadCar.net. Follow on Twitter @timcaincars and Instagram.

Timothy Cain
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  • Art Vandelay Art Vandelay on Sep 28, 2017

    Good for Huntsville

  • Sceptic Sceptic on Oct 06, 2017

    This is incredibly smart move by Toyota. They are positioning themselves to take over the market after the scourge of SUV/CUV whatever trucklet ends. It appears that Toyota is more American than the big 2.5 now. Huge investments in the USA, huge popularity among Americans. Quintessentially American company with Japanese heritage. At the same time it may be their downfall, too bland, too domestic. Cheap Chinese imports are likely to make a serious dent in Toyota's sales in the coming years.

  • Duke Woolworth Weight 4800# as I recall.
  • Kwik_Shift_Pro4X '19 Nissan Frontier @78000 miles has been oil changes ( eng/ diffs/ tranny/ transfer). Still on original brakes and second set of tires.
  • ChristianWimmer I have a 2018 Mercedes A250 with almost 80,000 km on the clock and a vintage ‘89 Mercedes 500SL R129 with almost 300,000 km.The A250 has had zero issues but the yearly servicing costs are typically expensive from this brand - as expected. Basic yearly service costs around 400 Euros whereas a more comprehensive servicing with new brake pads, spark plugs plus TÜV etc. is in the 1000+ Euro region.The 500SL servicing costs were expensive when it was serviced at a Benz dealer, but they won’t touch this classic anymore. I have it serviced by a mechanic from another Benz dealership who also owns an R129 300SL-24 and he’ll do basic maintenance on it for a mere 150 Euros. I only drive the 500SL about 2000 km a year so running costs are low although the fuel costs are insane here. The 500SL has had two previous owners with full service history. It’s been a reliable car according to the records. The roof folding mechanism needs so adjusting and oiling from time to time but that’s normal.
  • Theflyersfan I wonder how many people recalled these after watching EuroCrash. There's someone one street over that has a similar yellow one of these, and you can tell he loves that car. It was just a tough sell - too expensive, way too heavy, zero passenger space, limited cargo bed, but for a chunk of the population, looked awesome. This was always meant to be a one and done car. Hopefully some are still running 20 years from now so we have a "remember when?" moment with them.
  • Lorenzo A friend bought one of these new. Six months later he traded it in for a Chrysler PT Cruiser. He already had a 1998 Corvette, so I thought he just wanted more passenger space. It turned out someone broke into the SSR and stole $1500 of tools, without even breaking the lock. He figured nobody breaks into a PT Cruiser, but he had a custom trunk lock installed.
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