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Yaris compact sedans being assembled at a Toyota Motor plant in Japan for export to North America. Toyota said it has lost output of 140,000 vehicles since a disastrous earthquake earlier this month disrupted production in Japan. Image Credit: AP

New York: Global automakers may lose production of 600,000 vehicles by the end of the month as the earthquake in Japan halts assembly lines and work at suppliers including the maker of a paint pigment.

About 320,000 vehicles may have been lost worldwide as of March 24, and manufacturing at plants in North America may be affected when parts supplies start running out as soon as early April, said Michael Robinet, vice-president of Lexington, Massachusetts-based IHS Automotive.

"The next surge of shutdowns comes when the pipeline of parts that were already built dries up," Robinet said. "The rate of lost production will accelerate once North American plants join in."

Toyota Motor said it has lost output of 140,000 vehicles, and Honda Motor has lost 46,600 cars and trucks and 5,000 motorcycles. Mitsubishi Motors' output was down by 15,000 units. Ford Motor hasn't lost any output, said Todd Nissen, a spokesman.

Honda, Japan's third-largest automaker, said its production in North America may be disrupted after April 1 because quake damage is restricting parts supplies, Natsuno Asanuma, a spokeswoman for the company, said today by phone. Plants in Ohio, Alabama, Indiana, Canada and Mexico may be affected, she said.

Mazda Motor, which had said its production was reduced by 31,000 cars, has suspended US dealer orders for vehicles built at its two Japanese car factories because of supply disruptions. Mazda plants in Hiroshima and Hofu have stopped production of new models, said Tim Gilman, a spokesman. Mazda makes the Mazda2, Mazda3, RX-8, MX-5, CX-7 and CX-9 in Japan.

While neither plant was damaged, access to parts and supplies has been crimped in the aftermath of the disaster, he said

Nissan Motor, General Motors and other companies haven't provided details on their possible losses.

Merck KGaA has lost production of a metallic automotive paint pigment called Xirallic because its factory is 40 kilometres miles from the Fukushima Dai-Ichi plant that was damaged by the earthquake and tsunami, Gangolf Schrimpf, a spokesman for the Darmstadt, Germany-based company, said in a telephone interview. Merck doesn't know when company engineers will be able re- enter the Onahama factory, and it will take four to eight weeks to resume output after they gain access, he said.

"It's not our fault, and we can't get back in," Schrimpf said. "It's bad for us and bad for our customers. It's sort of at a dead-end currently."

Chrysler is restricting dealers' orders on 10 vehicle colours because of the potential for a shortage, Katie Hepler, a spokeswoman, said in an e-mail. The colours include blacks, such as Blackberry Pearl, and reds, such as Inferno, she said.

"We currently have an adequate days' supply to meet existing customer orders and are taking this step as a precautionary measure," Hepler said.

Sales impact feared

Ford told dealers March 24 to stop taking orders for vehicles painted in tuxedo black and three red shades.

Silver was the most popular automobile color last year, Pittsburgh-based PPG Industries, the largest supplier of paint for North American auto production, said in October. Silver, gray and charcoal accounted for 31 per cent of vehicle-paint choices in North America, up from 20 per cent in 2008. Black and white tied for second, with 18 per cent each. Red was next at 11 per cent, said PPG, which makes auto paint.

"We could certainly see some slowdown in sales," said Rebecca Lindland, an analyst for IHS Automotive. "Black and red cars are pretty darn popular."

DuPont, the second-largest auto-paint supplier in North America, is monitoring the situation and the potential impact to its customers, Gregg Schmidt, a spokesman, said in an e-mailed statement. The Wilmington, Delaware-based company does use Xirallic, Schmidt said. Mike Millar, a spokesman for PPG, declined to comment.

GM idled two compact-car plants in Europe and a pick-up factory in Shreveport, Louisiana, amid parts shortages. GM sent electronics parts from Shreveport to a factory in Kansas City, Kansas, where the more-profitable Chevrolet Malibu and Buick LaCrosse sedans are made, said two people familiar with the matter. Production in Shreveport will resume today, Sherrie Childers Arb, a GM spokeswoman, said in an interview.

GM executives sent out a memo on March 18 asking employees to limit travel and expenses to essential business as a precaution.

US automakers' plants may experience sporadic shutdowns because they get so many parts from Japan, said Brian Johnson, an analyst with Barclays Capital in Chicago. While lost production would hurt earnings, lower inventory among the Japanese automakers may allow GM, Ford and Chrysler Group to gain market share or reduce price discounts, he said.