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Tribune News Service
Tribune News Service
Business
Matt Kempner

Coca-Cola is reopening some China plants closed in wake of coronavirus

Many of Coca-Cola's 45 plants in China have remained closed to help prevent the spread of the coronavirus, but the company said some are reopening with the backing of China's government.

"The Chinese government wants to make sure the flow of food and beverages for its population doesn't stop," Coca-Cola Company chief executive James Quincey said in a call with analysts Thursday.

"So we, under the auspices of the Chinese government and their crisis management, are reopening some of our manufacturing facilities to make sure we can continue to produce our product for the population and get it distributed in a way that is not going to ... be part of the spread," he said.

He did not detail how that would be done. The company is not specifying how many plants will remain closed or reopen.

The government had asked businesses to remain shut through Feb. 9, but Coke said it continued some operations with the permission of local authorities.

Coke's focus is on the safety of its employees, and then on accommodating the needs of the government to help deal with the crisis, Quincey said.

Coke has about 47,000 company and bottler employees in China. It provided workers with face masks and hand sanitizer and installed temperature screening in offices and plants. Nonessential international business travel to and from China was also suspended through March, the company said.

China normally accounts for 10% of the drink volume Coke sells globally, though the China market generates a lower percent of company revenues and profits. Quincey said it is too soon to determine the outbreak's short-term financial impact.

Coke released revenue growth figures Thursday for the fourth quarter of last year that exceeded analysts' expectations, while profits fell in line with expectations.

With the SARS virus outbreak in China in 2003, Coke did not suffer a "particularly noticeable" long-term business impact, Quincey said. "It is worth noting China's economy is much bigger, and it could become more connected to the rest of the world."

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