The Oakland Press

Ford to cut 3,800 jobs in Europe, mostly in Germany and U.K.

- By Geir Moulson The Associated Press

Ford said Tuesday that it will cut 3,800 jobs in Europe over the next three years in an effort to streamline its operations as it contends with economic challenges and increasing competitio­n on electric cars.

The automaker said 2,300 jobs will be eliminated in Germany, 1,300 in the United Kingdom and 200 elsewhere on the continent. It said its strategy to offer an all-electric fleet in Europe by 2035 has not changed and that production of its first Europeanbu­ilt electric car is due to start later this year.

The Dearborn, Michigan-based company said it is looking for “a leaner, more competitiv­e cost structure for Ford in Europe.” The automaker will embark on consultati­ons “with the intent to achieve the reductions through voluntary separation programs.”

The job cuts come amid a sea change in the global auto industry from gasguzzlin­g combustion engines to electric vehicles. Government­s are pushing to reduce the emissions that contribute to climate change, and a resulting race to develop electric vehicles has generated intense competitio­n among automakers.

It’s even stirred tensions among Western allies as the U.S. rolls out big subsidies for clean technology like EVs that European government­s fear could hurt homegrown industry.

Ford aims to cut 2,800 of the European jobs in engineerin­g by 2025 as a result of the transition to electric cars that are less complex, though it plans to keep about 3,400 engineerin­g jobs on the continent. The remaining 1,000 jobs will be cut on the administra­tive side.

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