20 November 2024, 15:49
Picture:
Getty
Ford have announced 800 jobs will be cut in the UK, with 4,000 jobs lost across Europe.
Over the next three years, the car manufacturing company will axe jobs across Europe amid pressure from “lower-than-expected demand” for its electric cars.
The UK job cuts in the are expected to come from administrative or product development roles.
Ford did not disclose with UK sites would be affected.
Ford employs 5,300 workers across the UK and hopes to make the majority of job cuts through voluntary redundancy.
The company said that weakness in the electric vehicle market means it will also cut production for its new Explorer and Capri electric vehicles.
Early last year, Ford axed around 1,300 UK jobs, as part of a wider programme of 3,800 job cuts across Europe.
Picture:
Getty
Dave Johnston, Ford’s European vice president for transformation and partnerships, said to Sky News: “It is critical to take difficult but decisive action to ensure Ford’s future competitiveness in Europe.”
Figures shows purchases of pure electric used cars are at record levels, says Society of Motor Manufacturers and Traders.
53,423 of the cars changed hands between July and September were electric, up 57% from last year.
Colin Walker, The Energy and Climate Intelligence Unit transport analyst, said: “The increasing number of new EVs being sold today will hit the used market in around three to four years’ time, opening up the opportunity for cheaper and cleaner electric driving to the majority of people, as most people buy their cars second-hand.”
Picture:
Alamy
Lloyds Banking Group is planning to hire hundreds of engineers in India as the company plans to shift its employment opportunit
£1.6m Music Export Growth Scheme to support 58 independent UK artists to tour the world Funding will boost UK’s creative industries – a key growth se
A BELOVED restaurant chain has announced it will close eight venues across the UK, scrapping 158 jobs in the process.Owners are pointing the finger at Labour's
The latest figures published by the US Bureau of Labor Statistics today (7 March) came in below market expectations, with economists polled by