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Sony to Close Westmoreland Plant
[December 13, 2008]

Sony to Close Westmoreland Plant


(Wireless News Via Acquire Media NewsEdge)
Sony Electronics employees at its Pittsburgh Technology Center were
advised this week that the company will be discontinuing all of its
operations at the Westmoreland County facility over the next 16 months,
beginning with television manufacturing by the end of February 2009.

The action is one of the first of several plant closings Sony
Corporation recently announced that will take place worldwide through
March 2010 as part of a global profit recovery plan. A recorded media
plant in France will also be closing in this fiscal year. Sony
announced on December 9 that 10 percent of its current 57 manufacturing
sites will be closed.

First opened in 1990 to produce large rear projection TVs, Sony's
facility in Southwestern Pennsylvania currently has about 560
employees, who are primarily involved with flat-panel LCD (liquid
crystal display) television production, repair service and logistics.

"The current economic climate was a key factor that led us to make the
strategic business decision to streamline our manufacturing operations
not only in the U.S. but worldwide," said Stan Glasgow, president and
chief operating officer of Sony Electronics.

Glasgow noted that Sony's remaining North American television
manufacturing centers in Baja, Mexico, will be able to handle
anticipated market demand in the region for the foreseeable future.

The company also advised local employees that repair and logistics
operations at the Westmoreland facility will wind down by March 2010.

Located about 35 miles east of Pittsburgh, the Sony plant currently
assembles 46- and 52-inch Bravia LCD high-definition televisions. There
are also television and Blu-ray Disc player repair operations on the
site. In addition, the site currently serves as the company's East
Coast distribution center for consumer televisions.

It had previously been the home for the production of both Sony rear
projection televisions and Trinitron cathode ray tube-based



televisions. The production of these models ended in 2007 and 2006,
respectively, as the company exited these markets in favor of newer,
more efficient and lighter LCD flat-panel, high-definition televisions.

The Sony Technology Center-Pittsburgh (STC-P) was once the world's
first vertically integrated television manufacturing plant, using sand
from Central Pennsylvania and West Virginia to make television glass at
another facility on the site for color picture tubes, and ending with
the finished sets produced for shipment throughout the world. The glass
was made at the former American Video Glass Company, a joint venture
between Sony Electronics and Corning Asahi Video Products in State
College, Pa., which has since been closed.


"The dedicated people who have worked here contributed to a legacy of
excellence and commitment for which I am grateful," said Chuck Gregory,
deputy president of Sony Electronics' Flat Television Operations of the
Americas (FTV-A) and president of STC-P. "By the nature of our
business, Sony has to be a company of constant advancement and
innovation, even in challenging economic times. This means we must
adapt to change and make difficult decisions to make way for new
successes based on worldwide market dynamics.

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((Distributed on behalf of 10Meters via M2 Communications Ltd -
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Copyright ? 2008 Wireless News

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