By Reuters
MEXICO CITY — Mexico’s automotive industry can exit the coronavirus lockdown before June 1 if companies have approved safety measures in place, the government said on Friday, seeking to set the record straight after sending out confusing signals on the matter.
Announced in the government’s official gazette, the instructions should allow companies to reconnect key supply chains between Mexico and the rest of North America, which depends considerably on parts made south of the U.S. border.
The directive refers to manufacturers of transportation equipment, as well as the mining and construction industries, all of which the government has designated essential and from May 18 can begin establishing their security protocols.
«If the process is concluded and approved before June 1, the relevant company or industry will be able to begin its operations,» the government said, noting that companies which put workers’ health at risk would be shut down.
Earlier this week, Mexico’s government indicated the auto sector would start reopening on Monday and published advice to that effect in a page in the official gazette.
The government later withdrew the page without clarifying whether it would affect the dates of the restart. On Thursday, it published new instructions indicating the industry would not be allowed to reopen until June 1.
Senior U.S. politicians and auto companies in particular have been pressing the Mexican government to reopen factories, but the conflicting statements on the restart have stirred concern about ongoing disruptions in the industry.
The coronavirus outbreak is still intensifying in Mexico, with new infections and confirmed deaths reaching their highest daily totals this week. Mexico registered its first confirmed cases weeks after Canada and the United States.
The ongoing health crisis has led to concerns in the country, including among lawmakers in President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador’s ruling National Regeneration Movement (MORENA), that the government was moving too quickly to reopen sections of the economy.
At the same time, parts of the auto industry had begun preparing for a restart on Monday, saying they regarded the government’s statement pointing to May 18 as having legal force.
Lopez Obrador said on Friday that according to experts’ projections, the pandemic would begin easing in the worst-hit areas of the country in the coming days.
«We’re seeing the light at the end of the tunnel to return to the new reality,» he said in a regular news conference.
(Reporting by Dave Graham; Editing by Paul Simao)