Business Standard

JLR plans to cut 1,000 jobs in UK

- PRESS TRUST OF INDIA

Tata Motors-owned Jaguar Land Rover is planning to cut jobs, as it scales back production at some of its UK sites, amid what it termed as “headwinds” affecting the automotive industry.

While Jaguar Land Rover (JLR) is yet to confirm the exact number of jobs to be lost, some reports indicate that around 1,000 temporary workers are likely to be hit.

The luxury carmaker said the ‘review’ of its production schedules is being undertaken to ensure market demand is balanced globally and that it will lay out its 2018-19 production plans to the workforce on Monday. “We are continuing to recruit large numbers of highly skilled engineers, graduates and apprentice­s as we over-proportion­ally invest in new products and technologi­es,” it added.

The company stressed it remains committed to its UK plants, having invested more than £4 billion since 2010 to future-proof manufactur­ing technologi­es to deliver new models. Solihull and the nearby Castle Bromwich site are expected to be hit by production cuts. There are 3,200 people employed at the Castle Bromwich site and a further 10,000 at Solihull.

The job cuts are expected largely at Solihull in the West Midlands region of England, with mostly agency staff not having their contracts renewed. JLR employs around 40,000 people across six sites in the UK.

Earlier this year, Britain’s largest car manufactur­er had announced plans to cut production at its Halewood plant in Merseyside and pointed to “uncertaint­y” around the Brexit vote as well as the future of diesel vehicles as the main factors behind the “temporary adjustment­s”.

The latest set of cuts come in the wake of a weak UK market, with Jaguar sales down 26 per cent so far this year, compared with last year, while demand for Land Rovers in Britain is down 20 per cent.

The latest set of cuts come in the wake of a weak UKmarket, with Jaguar sales down 26 per cent so far this year

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