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BMW PREPARES THE ROAD FOR BREXIT FOR ITS SUPPLIERS IN UK AND GERMANY

Training days on customs procedures have been held as a ‘precaution­ary’ safeguard for UK’s scheduled exit

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BMW makes cars that accelerate to 100 kilometres per hour in 3.4 seconds, park themselves, and let you crank the volume on your radio by waving your hand. But as Brexit approaches, BMW is working on something far more prosaic: teaching suppliers to fill out customs forms.

The German car maker has held training days for suppliers near its factories in Munich and Oxford, England, to make sure they are ready for the customs clearance procedures BMW suspects they will need to move parts between the UK and the European Union. It is a process that many haven’t spent much time on because they operate only within the EU.

About 400 people attended the Munich session in April and 150 went to the Oxford day in May, the company says, and it’s considerin­g more sessions elsewhere. Suppliers are being trained on “the basics of customs clearance”, BMW’s customs manager Stephan Freismuth told an car industry conference last month.

BMW is far from alone in developing Brexit contingenc­y plans as fears about the impact of a bad deal or no deal escalate. Jet-engine maker Rolls-Royce is moving design approval for most of its power plants from the UK to Germany in what it describes as a “precaution­ary” Brexit safeguard. Plane maker Airbus says it may stockpile parts at a wing factory in Wales.

And Jaguar Land Rover, which warned the UK government last week that a “bad Brexit” would jeopardise as much as £80 billion (Dh390.35bn) in outlays over the next five years, has spent £10 million on preparatio­ns.

BMW says it needs to offer the training sessions because many vendors across Europe have little or no experience moving goods in and out of the EU. A survey conducted among suppliers found that about half had a “clear need for support” with customs.

“It doesn’t matter how the future trade relationsh­ip looks,” Mr Freismuth said at the June conference. “In the end we will have a customs border where we have clearance for customs even if we don’t pay customs duties.”

The company manufactur­es Mini cars near Oxford, produces engines at a plant near Birmingham, and owns Rolls-Royce Motor Cars, which makes its luxury sedans in southern England. BMW declined to give details of the training or say how much it is spending to help suppliers prepare for Brexit.

Most car manufactur­ers receive parts at their factories just before they are needed to reduce warehousin­g costs, but the practice leaves the industry vulnerable to delays at the border.

Penny Todd, UK customs supervisor at Ford Motor, told the June industry conference that it has also been thinking about how to help suppliers who’ve never had to deal with import and export declaratio­ns before. Ford, which has engine plants in England and Wales, says it hasn’t yet run any training sessions. But if Brexit causes tariffs to hit levels allowed by the World Trade Organisati­on, the company says it would face an extra $1bn in annual costs.

We will have a customs border with clearance for customs even if we don’t pay duties STEPHAN FREISMUTH BMW customs manager

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