The
challenge of investing in electric, hybrid and autonomous
vehicles while having to overhaul combustion engines to meet new
clean-air rules, has forced Europe's carmakers to slash fixed
costs and streamline their model portfolios.
Ford said it has ceased production at three plants in Russia, is
closing plants in France and Wales, and has cut shifts at
factories in Valencia, Spain and Saarlouis, Germany.
"We have largely concluded consultations with social partners
regarding restructuring actions," Stuart Rowley, president, Ford
of Europe told Reuters.
Approximately 12,000 jobs will be affected at Ford's wholly
owned facilities and consolidated joint ventures in Europe by
the end of 2020, primarily through voluntary separation
programs.
Around 2,000 of those are salaried positions, which are included
among the 7,000 salaried positions Ford is reducing globally,
the carmaker said. The rest are workers on hourly contracts or
agency workers.
Ford Europe has 51,000 employees in Europe or 65,000 when joint
ventures are included.
In January Ford announced a sweeping business review which
included the prospect of plant closures and discontinuing
loss-making vehicle lines to pursue a 6 percent operating margin
in Europe.
Demand for cars in Europe is falling, European automobile
manufacturers' association ACEA said on Thursday, predicting
that European passenger car registrations will shrink by 1% in
2019 to 15 million cars, revising its previous forecast of 1%
growth.
(Reporting by Edward Taylor; Editing by Tassilo Hummel)
[© 2019 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2019 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content.
|
|