Chinese City Hosting Key IPhone Plant Lifts Covid Lockdown

The central Chinese city of Zhengzhou, home of Apple Inc.’s largest manufacturing site, is lifting a lockdown on its main urban areas after five days.

(Bloomberg) — The central Chinese city of Zhengzhou, home of Apple Inc.’s largest manufacturing site, is lifting a lockdown on its main urban areas after five days. 

As of Nov. 30, Zhengzhou will remove so-called mobility controls — a euphemism for lockdown — and replace them with normal Covid-combating measures, according to a post on the local government’s official WeChat account. Businesses will be allowed to resume operations in an orderly manner, and people outside of designated high-risk areas can skip Covid tests as long as they don’t leave home. 

The announcement came hours after Chinese officials vowed to avoid excessive restrictions following the outbreak of weekend protests across the country against President Xi Jinping’s strict Covid Zero policy. Goldman Sachs said on Monday that it saw a 30% chance of the policy ending before April, earlier than widely anticipated, in the wake of the demonstrations.

The iPhone plant in Zhengzhou, operated by Foxconn Technology Group, has been at the center of the some of the unrest, witnessing a rare violent protest in late November after almost a month under tough restrictions intended to quash a Covid outbreak.

Foxconn has been struggling to secure enough workers to crank out the latest iPhone 14 Pro devices, the most sought-after models of Apple’s latest handset offerings, as many have departed following Covid outbreaks on the campus. 

The Taiwanese company is offering various incentives to retain existing workers while luring former employees back. Turmoil at the plant is likely to result in a output shortfall of close to 6 million iPhone Pro units this year, Bloomberg News has reported. 

–With assistance from Jacob Gu.

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©2022 Bloomberg L.P.

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