Ford tells UK: We also
need Brexit deals with Turkey, South Africa
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[May 10, 2017]
By Costas Pitas
LONDON
(Reuters) - Britain needs to strike post-Brexit trade deals with
countries such as Turkey and South Africa as well as the European Union,
Ford said on Wednesday, underlining the scale of the challenge facing
Prime Minister Theresa May to meet business demands.
Ford <F.N>, Britain's biggest automotive engine-maker, operates two
manufacturing sites in the country and like other companies has warned
that any trade restrictions after it leaves the EU could add to costs
and endanger British production.
The U.S. carmaker denies union claims it is planning to ax 1,100 jobs at
its engine plant in Wales by the end of the decade after scaling back an
investment there.
Ford sends UK-built engines to Turkey, where it assembles its range of
Transit vans and then exports many completed vehicles to Britain,
benefiting from the barrier-free trade guaranteed by the EU's customs
deal with Turkey.
All of Ford's Ranger pick-up trucks sold in Britain, meanwhile, are made
in South Africa, reflecting the interconnected supply and sales chain
made easy by EU trade deals with other countries, which Britain will now
need to renegotiate as it leaves the bloc.
"For Ford, it's not only important for the UK's agreement with the 27
(remaining EU) countries but equally important are countries like Turkey
and South Africa which hasn't really been talked about," Ford of Europe
CEO Jim Farley told a London conference.
The company's British-built engines face tariffs of up to 2.7 percent,
while vehicle imports could be hit by tariffs of up to 10 percent if
Britain has to fall back on World Trade Organization trading rules.
Farley suggested it would be hard for politicians to complete a full
Brexit deal between now and March 2019, the end of a two-year period set
out in EU legislation, and there needed to be time to adjust to the new
terms.
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Jim Farley in Geneva, Switzerland, March 1, 2016. REUTERS/Denis
Balibouse
"There
should be a transition period. That transition period is really critical for the
future of our investments in the UK," he said.
May, who polls show is likely to win a landslide victory in a national election
on June 8, has singled out the resurgent car industry as a key sector she wishes
to back, striking a deal with Japan's Nissan <7201.T> last year to expand output
at its northeast England plant.
The government promised Nissan extra support to counter any Brexit-induced loss
of competitiveness, according to a source, and the firm discussed with Britain's
business minister how to boost the uptake of electric cars, according to
documents seen by Reuters, with initiatives later announced.
Ford suggested it could also seek government support to maintain the benefits of
tariff-free trade.
"We are spending a lot of time thinking and talking about how we need to change
our operations and what support we need from the government and other entities
not only in the UK to make sure (trade) friction doesn't get created," Farley
said.
(Editing by Kate Holton and Mark Potter)
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