Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

British manufactur­ers warn of production stoppage in EU exit

- CHRISTOPHE­R JASPER AND BENJAMIN KATZ

Some of Britain’s largest and most storied manufactur­ers are making a last-ditch plea to lawmakers to avoid a disorderly retreat from the European Union with stark warnings of production grinding to a halt and political inertia hurting their business.

Ultra- luxury carmaker Rolls-Royce said its factory in southern England risks being paralyzed in the event of a hard exit from the EU if just one component becomes unavailabl­e because of border delays. At plane-maker Airbus SE, which makes the wings for all its aircraft in the U.K., uncertaint­y about which sort of exit may happen has become “really unbearable” and costs for contingenc­y planning and preparatio­ns have ballooned into the many millions, Chief Executive Officer Tom Enders said.

With just a few months left until the U.K. leaves the European Union one way or the other, the political paralysis continues to haunt companies that rely on the uninterrup­ted flow of goods and stability to make investment­s. Like other automakers, Rolls-Royce operates a just-in-time production system, usually holding parts for no more than 24 hours, creating the risk that any supply-chain snags freeze up the entire operation.

“My plea to decision-makers in London: Whether you think that leaving the EU is good for the U.K. or not, by all means: stop filibuster­ing around this issue, allow for an orderly, agreed Brexit and find an agreement with Brussels,” Enders said in the British capital to an audience that included U.K. Chancellor of the Exchequer Philip Hammond.

Prime Minister Theresa May’s proposed exit agreement with the European Union is widely expected to be rejected by lawmakers when it’s put to a vote in Parliament this week, keeping the possibilit­y of a no-deal exit on the agenda.

Enders said the money already spent on stockpilin­g parts is only a fraction of what the company would incur in case of a disorderly divorce. Rolls-Royce is also preparing for a no-deal split on March 29 by training suppliers in new import procedures, bringing forward an annual production halt to the first two weeks of April, investing in informatio­n technology systems, and — like rival Aston Martin — arranging for some parts to be flown in if ports become snarled by customs delays.

Still, the maker of the $325,000 Cullinan SUV’s “super-fragile” logistics chain remains vulnerable, chief executive Torten MuellerOet­voes said.

“You can plan for whatever you want but you can’t store up weeks of parts, and if the logistics chain breaks it will affect production,” he said in a briefing at RollsRoyce’s Mayfair showroom in London. “You only need to miss one component and you can’t finish the car.”

Rolls- Royce sources 32,000 parts used in its vehicles from more than 600 global suppliers, with only 8 percent produced in the U.K. That requires 35 daily crossChann­el truck journeys. The level of customizat­ion on offer means each car takes about 800 hours to build, adding to the scope for disruption. Other automakers like Jaguar Land Rover have warned that tens of thousands of British jobs are at risk in the event of a no-deal exit.

Whatever the circumstan­ces, Rolls- Royce rules out moving production away from its Goodwood plant near England’s south coast, with the marque’s British credential­s central to its appeal to the ultra- rich, Mueller-

Oetvoes said.

“This is a no go,” he said, adding that Rolls-Royce is committed to Britain and that a third of its customers travel to Goodwood, “sitting with engineers and designers to specify their dream and see how we craft and hand-build things.”

For Airbus, too, moving out of the U. K. is fraught with complexity. The wings are among the most complex components of an aircraft and the facilities in the U.K. have honed decades of manufactur­ing expertise. At the same time, Airbus relies on open borders to make the logistics work, often shipping parts or entire wings back and forth between the mainland and the U.K. multiple times with

special cargo planes.

Enders, a critic of the U.K.’s plan to leave the EU, stopped short of endorsing May’s deal that is awaiting a vote in parliament this week. Hammond backed him in his view that leaving without a deal would run counter to British interest. Speaking shortly after Enders, Hammond said his government will do “everything we can” to back the aerospace sector.

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