The Press and Journal (Inverness, Highlands, and Islands)

Car parts factory worth £60m yearly

Two huge new projects planned

- BY ANN MACK

THE company behind a new car parts factory planned for Lochaber has revealed that the plant would be worth almost £60million a year to the Highland economy. Liberty British Aluminium submitted detailed proposals for the factory at the smelter site in Fort William to Highland Council in the past few days.

And the latest figures from the company show that a projected £57.7million would be delivered for the north every year once the factory is in full production.

In addition, the plant will support 744 jobs either directly or in the supply chain across the Highlands.

Local MSP Kate Forbes said: “The impact on the Highland economy every year will be phenomenal.”

A West Highland region is set for a £100million cash boost with two huge local projects in the pipeline.

More than £50million could be added to the Lochaber economy if plans to create an alloy wheels factory in Fort William are given the green light.

The same amount is likely to be spent building up to 400 houses in the town as a result of a local housing associatio­n’s “biggest project” to date.

Liberty British Aluminium submitted its detailed proposals for the factory at the smelter site in Fort William to Highland Council this week.

The latest figures from the company show that a projected £54.1million GVA, gross value added, would be delivered for Lochaber every year once the factory is in full production.

And almost 700 local jobs would be created, 400 at the alloy wheels factory and another 279 through the supply chain.

A Liberty British Aluminium spokesman said: “The biggest impact of the new factory would be in Lochaber, but it would also affect the wider economy.

“Because some of the suppliers to the new factory would come from outwith the Lochaber area, it would also affect the Highlands and Scotland as a whole.

“There will also be a oneoff figure during the constructi­on period which will bring around £6.3million to the Highland economy.”

The jobs boost would not just affect Lochaber as the figures would also increase in the Highlands too.

Local MSP Kate Forbes said: “It’s great to see the initial proposal for the alloy wheels factory start to take shape. In taking this proposal forward, we are one step closer to possibly employing just short of 700 people.

“The impact on the Highland economy every year will also be phenomenal.”

Ian Blackford, MP for

“The impact on the Highland economy every year will be phenomenal

Ross, Skye and Lochaber, added: “I’m delighted the plans have been submitted as a lot of work has gone into the proposals.

“It’s a logical extension of the smelter and this will not only safeguard jobs but create much more not only in this area but in other parts of the Highlands as well.”

Liberty British Aluminium’s plans for the new factory have 130 different documents attached, covering everything at the site from geology, hydrology and hydrogeolo­gy study areas, peat depth investigat­ion and environmen­tal impact assessment reports, to the ecology study area, existing woodland cover, a landscape masterplan and transport assessment. The company’s planning statement says the proposed alloy wheel manufactur­ing facility is the first priority phase in the developmen­t of additional industrial processes at Fort William, involving an investment of more than £130million.

The new factory would be built adjacent to the existing smelter outside the town and would initially be capable of manufactur­ing two million alloy wheels with scope for expansion to deliver three million in the future.

A second phase could potentiall­y be a rolling mill plant, which creates sheets or bars out of liquid steel.

The statement continues: “The investment in the site will be a significan­t catalyst in terms of realising economic developmen­t in the area. The alloy wheel manufactur­ing facility will safeguard the existing smelter and will require the developmen­t of new homes.

“In order to meet this job supply, Liberty British Aluminium is committed to drawing in new people to the area. Liberty House and sister company SIMEC are part of the global giant, GFG Alliance.

On this occasion, the word phenomenal did not seem over the top or out of place: a local MSP used it to describe the sheer scale and impact of an alloy wheels factory to be built in the Highlands.

The wheels have, indeed, started turning in earnest on Liberty British Aluminium’s huge investment in the factory at Fort William’s smelter site.

The company is submitting its proposals, which sprawl across 130 pages of detail, to Highland Council this week.

The end result will be stunning, from an economic viewpoint, as it is hard to see how anything could stand in the way of this business juggernaut.

In fact, one would assume Highland

Council and Highlands and Islands Enterprise are straining every sinew to make it happen smoothly.

The statistics are mind-boggling: the Highlands could soon be producing a quarter of all car wheels in the UK, with two million alloys rolling off the production lines every year.

The company will also drive a cart and horse through the current market by reducing drasticall­y the UK motor industry’s reliance on imports.

In the meantime, 400 jobs will be created at the plant and another 250 in the supply chain, but the Highlands as a whole will also feel the benefits from a predicted £50million economic boost. There is only one word for it – phenomenal.

“It is hard to see how anything could stand in the way of this business juggernaut”

 ??  ?? WHEELS: The smelter could provide material for 2m alloy wheels a year
WHEELS: The smelter could provide material for 2m alloy wheels a year

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