Whirlpool to close 1,100-worker Evansville refrigerator factory

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Whirlpool Corp. announced Friday that it will close its refrigerator factory in Evansville, Ind., by next year and cut
1,100 jobs as it continues a push to trim excess capacity.

Whirlpool said it will move the production of refrigerators
with freezers on top to a company location in Mexico, where they are cheaper to produce. Ice makers produced in Evansville
will be moved to a yet-to-be-decided location.

The jobs will be eliminated in mid-2010. The Benton Harbor, Mich.-based
appliance maker has aggressively cut costs as demand for big-ticket items has shrunk in the recession.

Whirlpool spokeswoman
Jill Saletta, speaking at a Friday morning press conference Webcast by Evansville television station WFIE, said the plant
closing had nothing to do with worker performance.

"This decision is around cost," she said. "We had
to take a look at which plant we could get the best cost position in, and because top-mount refrigerators are not in the
demand that they used to be and they’re more of a commodity item, Mexico offers us the best cost platform to continue to
produce (them)."

The "difficult but necessary decision" to close the plant allows Whirlpool to streamline
its operations and reduce product overlap, said Al Holaday, Whirlpool’s vice president for North American manufacturing facilities,
in a statement.

Evansville Mayor Jonathan Weinzapfel said in a separate Webcast from WFIE that Whirlpool officials
told him they have lost money in Evansville for several years.

"We’re talking about a dramatic impact on the
economy and the work force," he said, regarding the factory closing. "Our job is to try to find ways to absorb
these folks into other positions in the economy."

Weinzapfel noted that companies like Evansville-based pediatric
nutrition products maker Mead Johnson Nutrition Co. are still doing well in the area.

City officials said they hope
to keep Whirlpool’s refrigeration product development center, but Whirlpool said it has not decided the fate of the center’s
300 employees. It expects to in the "near future."

Last year, Whirlpool cut 120 jobs at the Evansville plant.

Its closing fits into Whirlpool’s bigger plan of reducing excess capacity that it built between 2004 and 2007, said Brian
Sozzi, an analyst with Wall Street Strategies.

Cowen and Co. analyst Laura Champine noted that most Whirlpool factories
are only running one shift, and the bigger plants have room to take up production from smaller locations like Evansville.
She estimated that Evansville accounted for about 2 percent of Whirlpool’s work force.

"If you look at what they’ve
done over the past few years, it’s been all about closing their smaller plants so they can maximize production at their
larger plants," she said.

The company’s profit outlook for 2009 remains unchanged from a July forecast of $3.50
to $4 per share. Whirlpool shares rose $1.15 cents to $65.28 in afternoon trading Friday.

Evansville sits in the southwest
corner of Indiana, a state battered by manufacturing job losses during the recession. Elkhart County in northern Indiana
has seen unemployment rates approaching 20 percent due to the collapse of recreational vehicle manufacturing.

Other
parts of the state have been hurt by automotive bankruptcies. Indiana’s unemployment rate dropped slightly in July to 10.6
percent, as some auto workers returned to their jobs. But the state ranked ahead of the national average of 9.4 percent.

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