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Mercedes, Volvo, Boeing to close S. Carolina plants Friday due to Hurricane Ian

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Automakers Mercedes-Benz and Volvo Cars, U.S. plane maker Boeing Co, and the seaports that support manufacturers will suspend operations in South Carolina on Friday due to the potential impact of Hurricane Ian.

Ian, currently downgraded to a tropical storm, is expected to be become a hurricane again later on Thursday before making U.S. landfall for the second time on Friday, according to the U.S. National Hurricane Center. It issued a hurricane warning for the entire coast of South Carolina.

"Due to the potential impact of Hurricane Ian on the greater Charleston area and to focus on the safety of our team members our facility in Ladson, South Carolina, will be closed tomorrow,鈥 Mercedes spokeswoman Andrea Berg said in a Thursday statement.

The Mercedes plant in Ladson, South Carolina, outside Charleston, employs about 1,600 people and builds the Mercedes Sprinter and Metris vans.

"Due to the anticipated impact of Tropical Storm Ian, Boeing is suspending operations at both Boeing South Carolina campuses following second shift tonight," the company said in a statement, citing employee safety. "We will continue to assess the storm鈥檚 impact to employees and our operations."

Volvo Cars closed its plant in Ridgeville, outside of Charleston, at about 11 a.m. ET (1500 GMT) on Thursday and will keep it shut on Friday.

However, a spokesman for BMW, which has a plant in Greer, South Carolina, said the company's operations were far enough upstate that they were unaffected.

Boeing said it anticipates resuming normal operations on Sunday. Boeing conducts 787 Dreamliner final assembly in South Carolina and also fabricates, assembles and installs systems for rear fuselage sections of the Boeing 787 Dreamliner and joins and integrates midbody fuselage sections.

Boeing employs more than 5,500 people in its South Carolina operations.

The ocean seaports in Charleston and Georgetown will close all marine terminals on Friday, according to the South Carolina Ports Authority.

(Reporting by Ben Klayman in Detroit, David Shepardson in Las Vegas and Lisa Baertlein in Los Angeles; Editing by Franklin Paul and Bill Berkrot)

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