DETROIT (AP) -- If credit remains locked up and auto sales continue to slump, the federal government's $25 billion loan package for the auto industry could be a huge help in keeping Detroit's downtrodden automakers afloat, according to lawmakers and industry analysts.
Chrysler LLC, Ford Motor Co. and General Motors Corp., which likely will get the bulk of the loans, are losing billions and facing huge debts already as they try to remake their lineups from predominantly trucks and sport utility vehicles to smaller, more fuel-efficient vehicles.
The loan legislation, approved by Congress on Saturday, was passed to help the battered industry retool factories and develop technology to meet new government fuel-efficiency standards of at least 35 miles per gallon by 2020, a 40 percent increase.
With the bulk of the money apparently going to the Detroit Three, it could come in the nick of time for cash-strapped automakers which might otherwise have trouble borrowing more to cover their bills.
Government red tape, namely regulations written by the Energy Department, could delay the loans by up to 18 months. Congress specified that the agency produce preliminary rules within 60 days, and lawmakers who support the industry hope the funding arrives by spring.
"The longer it takes the less valuable and useful it is," said Sen. Carl Levin, D-Mich. "It may vary from company to company depending on their individual circumstances."
Levin says it's important to get the money to automakers within six months, because that's the time they're retooling factories for a big rollout of fuel-efficient 2010 models. General Motors and Ford each have announced new small cars for 2010, and GM and Chrysler have committed to rechargeable electric cars in the same year.
No one knows for sure how long it will take to get the money, but analysts and politicians are figuring on mid- to late-2009.