Times Colonist

Renault to cut 15,000 jobs around the world

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PARIS — French carmaker Renault said Friday it will cut 15,000 jobs worldwide as part of a 2 billion-euro ($2.2 billion US) cost-cutting plan, as a brutal drop in industry sales during the pandemic worsened the company’s pre-existing problems.

Renault, which employs 180,000 and is already negotiatin­g a bailout with the French government, said nearly 4,600 jobs will be cut in France and more than 10,000 in the rest of the world over three years. It will shrink its global production capacity from four million vehicles in 2019 to 3.3 million by 2024.

“The difficulti­es encountere­d by the group, the major crisis facing the automotive industry and the urgency of the ecological transition are all imperative­s that are driving the company to accelerate its transforma­tion,” the statement said.

Chairman Jean-Dominique Senard said at a news conference that “each decision, each cost cut has been weighed at length with employees in mind.”

Senard said the company will rely on voluntary departures, rather than firings, to meet its targeted cuts and is starting talks with unions.

Renault’s leadership is

“convinced that these are the right decisions,” he said. The COVID-19 crisis “only adds to the emergency of this plan.”

The company is suspending plans to increase capacity in Morocco and Romania. It is also considerin­g adapting its facilities in Russia to new products and will stop producing Renault-branded fuel-powered cars in China.

It will close one site in France, in Choisy-le-Roi, in the Paris suburb, which employs about 250 people.

“No to shutdown” read banners unfurled by dozens of workers protesting outside the plant on Friday. Unions organized a temporary walkout.

Renault said it wants to focus its 13 other French sites on “areas with a promising future” including electric vehicles, light commercial vehicles and high valueadded innovation.

Fabien Gache, from the CGT union at Renault, expressed concerns over the future of several French plants and denounced what he saw as a “very clear intention to wipe definitive­ly from France vehicle production capacities.” He called for more protests to put pressure on Renault’s leadership.

“Now people are a bit stunned,” he said. “We think we will need to find ways to protest and oppose the plan.”

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