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Nissan: UK factory still under threat from no-deal Brexit
By Simon JackBusiness editor
  • 3 June 2020
  • 1904comments

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Media captionNissan's Sunderland plant is "unsustainable" without a Brexit trade deal, said Ashwani Gupta.
The UK's largest car manufacturing plant is "unsustainable" if the UK leaves the European Union without a trade deal, owner Nissan says.

The Japanese company's global chief operating head told the BBC people had to understand the EU was the Sunderland factory's biggest customer.

Ashwani Gupta said that Nissan's commitment could not be maintained if there was not tariff-free EU access.

Nissan has invested billions of pounds in the plant, which has 7,000 workers.

His comments come despite the Sunderland site surviving this week's announcement on the Japanese giant's global restructuring programme.

Mr Gupta said: "You know we are the number one carmaker in the UK and we want to continue. We are committed. Having said that, if we are not getting the current tariffs, it's not our intention but the business will not be sustainable. That's what everybody has to understand."

Crucial talks
He also said that any plans for its strategic partner and 43%-shareholder Renault to take up spare capacity at Sunderland would be a matter for the French carmaker. The French government has a 15% stake in Renault.

This is not the first time that Nissan has pleaded with UK and EU negotiators to ensure that the 70% of cars manufactured at Sunderland which are sold in the EU can avoid tariffs of 10% under World Trade Organisation rules - the legal default position if a deal is not struck.

Those talks resumed this week, with the differences between the UK and EU being described on all sides as deep and wide.

Last week, the EU's chief negotiator Michel Barnier said the EU would consider a two-year Brexit delay, which was rebuffed by his UK counterpart David Frost, who told MPs the government's policy remains not to extend the transition period beyond the end of the year.

Under an agreement signed last year, the UK has until the end of this month to decide whether it wants to request such an extension so the coming weeks are crucial.

You must log in or register to see images
Image copyrightGETTY IMAGES
The comments by Nissan may dampen hopes raised just last week when the company said that while it was closing plants in Spain and Indonesia, it remained committed to Sunderland.

An announcement by Nissan that Renault might take the European lead in the companies' global manufacturing alliance (which also includes Mitsubishi) by taking up an estimated 20% spare capacity at Sunderland were quashed for the foreseeable future by Renault last week, when it said it had no current plans to move in to the UK.

China growth
Mr Gupta confirmed that any decision by its partners would be a matter for them, and that no such deal had been agreed. "When it comes to the allocation of manufacturing, each company will take the decision based on the competitiveness of the plants."

Nissan is a huge fan of the Sunderland plant and paid tribute to the efficiency and hard work of the operation. But it reiterated that was not enough to secure its long-term future if tariffs were imposed in a market which it described last week as "non-core". It only has a 3% market share of the vehicle market in Europe.

On a more encouraging note, Mr Gupta said recent sales figures from China showed the world's biggest car market was recovering fast and the company was winning market share. But vehicles for that market are not produced in the UK.

It is still possible that Renault could decide to move production of certain vehicles to Sunderland. But it is hard to see how a company which is 15%-owned by the French taxpayer could find a way to make that work where Nissan, which has been in Sunderland for 40 years, says it cannot.

Nissan's comments are a timely reminder that for many key industries, the Brexit issue - which has not been silenced by coronavirus news - has in many ways been amplified by it.


@brb look at the date this was published
 
Nissan: UK factory still under threat from no-deal Brexit
By Simon JackBusiness editor
  • 3 June 2020
  • 1904comments

Related Topics
You must log in or register to see images


Media captionNissan's Sunderland plant is "unsustainable" without a Brexit trade deal, said Ashwani Gupta.
The UK's largest car manufacturing plant is "unsustainable" if the UK leaves the European Union without a trade deal, owner Nissan says.

The Japanese company's global chief operating head told the BBC people had to understand the EU was the Sunderland factory's biggest customer.

Ashwani Gupta said that Nissan's commitment could not be maintained if there was not tariff-free EU access.

Nissan has invested billions of pounds in the plant, which has 7,000 workers.

His comments come despite the Sunderland site surviving this week's announcement on the Japanese giant's global restructuring programme.

Mr Gupta said: "You know we are the number one carmaker in the UK and we want to continue. We are committed. Having said that, if we are not getting the current tariffs, it's not our intention but the business will not be sustainable. That's what everybody has to understand."

Crucial talks
He also said that any plans for its strategic partner and 43%-shareholder Renault to take up spare capacity at Sunderland would be a matter for the French carmaker. The French government has a 15% stake in Renault.

This is not the first time that Nissan has pleaded with UK and EU negotiators to ensure that the 70% of cars manufactured at Sunderland which are sold in the EU can avoid tariffs of 10% under World Trade Organisation rules - the legal default position if a deal is not struck.

Those talks resumed this week, with the differences between the UK and EU being described on all sides as deep and wide.

Last week, the EU's chief negotiator Michel Barnier said the EU would consider a two-year Brexit delay, which was rebuffed by his UK counterpart David Frost, who told MPs the government's policy remains not to extend the transition period beyond the end of the year.

Under an agreement signed last year, the UK has until the end of this month to decide whether it wants to request such an extension so the coming weeks are crucial.

You must log in or register to see images
Image copyrightGETTY IMAGES
The comments by Nissan may dampen hopes raised just last week when the company said that while it was closing plants in Spain and Indonesia, it remained committed to Sunderland.

An announcement by Nissan that Renault might take the European lead in the companies' global manufacturing alliance (which also includes Mitsubishi) by taking up an estimated 20% spare capacity at Sunderland were quashed for the foreseeable future by Renault last week, when it said it had no current plans to move in to the UK.

China growth
Mr Gupta confirmed that any decision by its partners would be a matter for them, and that no such deal had been agreed. "When it comes to the allocation of manufacturing, each company will take the decision based on the competitiveness of the plants."

Nissan is a huge fan of the Sunderland plant and paid tribute to the efficiency and hard work of the operation. But it reiterated that was not enough to secure its long-term future if tariffs were imposed in a market which it described last week as "non-core". It only has a 3% market share of the vehicle market in Europe.

On a more encouraging note, Mr Gupta said recent sales figures from China showed the world's biggest car market was recovering fast and the company was winning market share. But vehicles for that market are not produced in the UK.

It is still possible that Renault could decide to move production of certain vehicles to Sunderland. But it is hard to see how a company which is 15%-owned by the French taxpayer could find a way to make that work where Nissan, which has been in Sunderland for 40 years, says it cannot.

Nissan's comments are a timely reminder that for many key industries, the Brexit issue - which has not been silenced by coronavirus news - has in many ways been amplified by it.


@brb look at the date this was published

You're a bit late <whistle>

It still don't explain what Japan's position is within Europe, let alone the UK.
 
In other news ....

"I don't want us to do any deal with the US which in anyway jeopardises our animal welfare standards or our food hygiene standards"
- Boris Johnson


Boris Johnson facing backlash after scrapping pledge to keep chlorinated chicken out of British supermarkets
https://www.independent.co.uk/news/...trade-talks-boris-johnson-trump-a9549656.html

Does anybody actually believe a word of anything he says ? Genuine question.
 
yeah, I love Boris, which is why I've been wanting him kicked out of parliament for his continual lying for years. You think you're enlightened and know the truth, but all you do is spout the **** the govt wants your type to spout, utter preposterous and easily disproven ****. That way, when you actually hit upon a truth, everyone will ignore you because of all the previous utter **** you've spouted.
I bet your 9/11 conspiracy is full of the usual **** like fake planes and demolition explosives, oh and jews, I can't forget the jews being heavily involved.

I don't dislike conspiracy theorires, I just dislike the utterly ridiculous ones that stop rationally minded people from believing the real ones.

<laugh>.......yeah ok......makes me wonder why you get so angry with me because it doesnt fit>>>>>>your truth <laugh>

fk off fella ew is fking boring as fk
 
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You're a bit late <whistle>

It still don't explain what Japan's position is within Europe, let alone the UK.
iirc there was A EU / Japan trade deal done about a 18 month ago which may have influenced the Honda decision re their Swindon plant .
On Nissan the major partner is actually Renault in there tie up .
 
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Reactions: brb
You're a bit late <whistle>

It still don't explain what Japan's position is within Europe, let alone the UK.
In other news ....

"I don't want us to do any deal with the US which in anyway jeopardises our animal welfare standards or our food hygiene standards"
- Boris Johnson


Boris Johnson facing backlash after scrapping pledge to keep chlorinated chicken out of British supermarkets
https://www.independent.co.uk/news/...trade-talks-boris-johnson-trump-a9549656.html

Does anybody actually believe a word of anything he says ? Genuine question.
Nope
US livestock are subjected to 900% more antibiotics the EU meat !
 
  • Like
Reactions: aberdude
Nissan: UK factory still under threat from no-deal Brexit
By Simon JackBusiness editor
  • 3 June 2020
  • 1904comments

Related Topics
You must log in or register to see images


Media captionNissan's Sunderland plant is "unsustainable" without a Brexit trade deal, said Ashwani Gupta.
The UK's largest car manufacturing plant is "unsustainable" if the UK leaves the European Union without a trade deal, owner Nissan says.

The Japanese company's global chief operating head told the BBC people had to understand the EU was the Sunderland factory's biggest customer.

Ashwani Gupta said that Nissan's commitment could not be maintained if there was not tariff-free EU access.

Nissan has invested billions of pounds in the plant, which has 7,000 workers.

His comments come despite the Sunderland site surviving this week's announcement on the Japanese giant's global restructuring programme.

Mr Gupta said: "You know we are the number one carmaker in the UK and we want to continue. We are committed. Having said that, if we are not getting the current tariffs, it's not our intention but the business will not be sustainable. That's what everybody has to understand."

Crucial talks
He also said that any plans for its strategic partner and 43%-shareholder Renault to take up spare capacity at Sunderland would be a matter for the French carmaker. The French government has a 15% stake in Renault.

This is not the first time that Nissan has pleaded with UK and EU negotiators to ensure that the 70% of cars manufactured at Sunderland which are sold in the EU can avoid tariffs of 10% under World Trade Organisation rules - the legal default position if a deal is not struck.

Those talks resumed this week, with the differences between the UK and EU being described on all sides as deep and wide.

Last week, the EU's chief negotiator Michel Barnier said the EU would consider a two-year Brexit delay, which was rebuffed by his UK counterpart David Frost, who told MPs the government's policy remains not to extend the transition period beyond the end of the year.

Under an agreement signed last year, the UK has until the end of this month to decide whether it wants to request such an extension so the coming weeks are crucial.

You must log in or register to see images
Image copyrightGETTY IMAGES
The comments by Nissan may dampen hopes raised just last week when the company said that while it was closing plants in Spain and Indonesia, it remained committed to Sunderland.

An announcement by Nissan that Renault might take the European lead in the companies' global manufacturing alliance (which also includes Mitsubishi) by taking up an estimated 20% spare capacity at Sunderland were quashed for the foreseeable future by Renault last week, when it said it had no current plans to move in to the UK.

China growth
Mr Gupta confirmed that any decision by its partners would be a matter for them, and that no such deal had been agreed. "When it comes to the allocation of manufacturing, each company will take the decision based on the competitiveness of the plants."

Nissan is a huge fan of the Sunderland plant and paid tribute to the efficiency and hard work of the operation. But it reiterated that was not enough to secure its long-term future if tariffs were imposed in a market which it described last week as "non-core". It only has a 3% market share of the vehicle market in Europe.

On a more encouraging note, Mr Gupta said recent sales figures from China showed the world's biggest car market was recovering fast and the company was winning market share. But vehicles for that market are not produced in the UK.

It is still possible that Renault could decide to move production of certain vehicles to Sunderland. But it is hard to see how a company which is 15%-owned by the French taxpayer could find a way to make that work where Nissan, which has been in Sunderland for 40 years, says it cannot.

Nissan's comments are a timely reminder that for many key industries, the Brexit issue - which has not been silenced by coronavirus news - has in many ways been amplified by it.


@brb look at the date this was published
Better see @Oh Saffy
 
In other news ....

"I don't want us to do any deal with the US which in anyway jeopardises our animal welfare standards or our food hygiene standards"
- Boris Johnson


Boris Johnson facing backlash after scrapping pledge to keep chlorinated chicken out of British supermarkets
https://www.independent.co.uk/news/...trade-talks-boris-johnson-trump-a9549656.html

Does anybody actually believe a word of anything he says ? Genuine question.
Yes. I believe him.

This is also just a newspaper report with no confirmed sources.
 
iirc there was A EU / Japan trade deal done about a 18 month ago which may have influenced the Honda decision re their Swindon plant .
On Nissan the major partner is actually Renault in there tie up .

All of which leads back to the guy who did a runner to the Lebanon. Which basically opened up the whole can of worms regarding Nissan and Renault. And after that they were going to rethink their future, not just within the UK but in Europe, hence demonstrated by the protests at job loses in Spain. But Brexit eh.
 
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Oh we're on Brexit again. Wonderful.

It gets fooking tiring mate. I knew about all the job losses in Europe but was no mention on here, and I purposely steered clear of it, even though I knew what was happening in Spain. Yet, as soon someone can point the finger at Brexit it's hey bingo!
 
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