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Brexit deal ‘must be clear by April if the UK car industry is to remain competitive’

Time 8:59 am, January 5, 2018

A BREXIT transition deal must be made clear by the end of March if the UK automotive industry is to stay competitive, says the SMMT.

The Society of Motor Manufacturers and Traders’ chief executive, Mike Hawes, pictured, said that the deadline for the government to give the industry information about the deal was now – otherwise it will have to start taking costly contingency measures.

Speaking ahead of the news that the new car market in the UK was down by 5.6 per cent in 2017, he said: ‘We need information now. We look at the European Commission and government statements about a possible transition deal and they don’t align. Our members struggle to make decisions on investments when they don’t know what’s ahead.


‘If we don’t have clarity by the end of the first quarter, after that the industry will have to start taking contingency measures, such as stockpiling parts and vehicles, which costs money and makes them less competitive.’

Uncertainty in the UK has impacted on vehicle sales and car buyers have voted with their feet in 2017, opting to hold on to their existing cars or buy used rather than choosing new. New car registration estimates were reassessed in November after seven months of decline in the market, and today’s figures are even lower than expected.

Hawes noted that although he wasn’t aware of Brexit resulting in anyone losing their jobs, ‘you can’t say it hasn’t cost potential new jobs – production and sales are down, which isn’t good for the industry’.


In October, Vauxhall announced that it was moving workers at its Ellesmere Port factory in Cheshire to a single shift and cutting 400 jobs through a ‘voluntary separation programme’.

The carmaker – now owned by France’s PSA Groupe, which also makes Peugeots and Citroens – said at the time that the move wasn’t because of Brexit, but was instead to bring costs down in line with its benchmark factories in France.

And Hawes used the site as an example of the positive opportunities that could be available after Brexit. He pointed to comments by PSA Groupe boss Carlos Tavares that ‘there could be advantages to having a factory that uses sterling and is outside the EU in close proximity to Europe’.

MORE: UK new car market drops for the first time in six years to 2.54 million

MORE: SMMT revises registration prediction for 2017 to only 2.6 million cars

MORE: Used car sales fall but market is holding steady, says SMMT

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Darren Cassey's avatar

Darren is a staff writer for Car Dealer parent company Blackball Media. He has been writing about cars for eight years and tests all the latest models on sale, with previous experience at Car Throttle and DriveTribe.



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