Volkswagen
considers historic German plant closures in cost drive
By Victoria
Waldersee and Christina Amann
September 3,
20247:24 PM GMT+2Updated 2 months ago
Summary
Companies
VW
considers one car plant, one component plant in Germany obsolete -works council
Cost-cutting
drive at namesake brand must be extended -VW
Management
'compelled' to end job security programme
Works
council promises 'fierce resistance' to plans
Shares
+1.2%
BERLIN, Sept
2 (Reuters) - Volkswagen (VOWG_p.DE), opens new tab is considering closing
factories in Germany for the first time, in a move that shows the mounting
price pressure Europe's top carmaker faces from Asian rivals.
Monday's
move marks the first major clash between Chief Executive Oliver Blume, who
analysts have described as more of a consensus builder than his often combative
predecessor Herbert Diess, and unions that command substantial influence at VW.
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VW considers
one large vehicle plant and one component factory in Germany to be obsolete,
said its works council as it vowed "fierce resistance" to the
executive board's plans.
Chief
Financial Officer Arno Antlitz will speak to staff alongside Volkswagen brand
chief Thomas Schaefer at a works council meeting on Wednesday morning.
Volkswagen's
works council head Daniela Cavallo, a member of the powerful IG Metall union,
said she expects CEO Blume to get involved in negotiations too, adding that
Wednesday's meeting would be "very uncomfortable" for the group's
management.
IG Metall
has thwarted previous attempts at more deep-rooted changes, most recently in
2022 when Diess departed as CEO.
Analysts
have in the past named VW sites in Osnabrueck, in Lower Saxony and Dresden, in
Saxony, as potential targets for closure. The state of Lower Saxony is
Volkswagen's second-largest shareholder and on Monday supported its review.
Volkswagen,
which employs around 680,000 staff, said that it also felt forced to end its
job security programme, which has been in place since 1994 and prevents job
cuts until 2029, adding all measures would be discussed with its works council.
IG Metall
says the job security covers Volkswagen plants in Wolfsburg, Hanover,
Braunschweig, Salzgitter, Kassel and Emden.
"The
situation is extremely tense and cannot be overcome by simple cost-cutting
measures," Schaefer said in a statement.
VW, which
drives most of Volkswagen's unit sales, is the first of its brands to undergo a
cost-cutting drive targeting 10 billion euros ($11 billion) in savings by 2026
as it attempts to streamline spending to survive the transition to electric
cars.
'WAKE-UP
CALL'
A difficult
economic environment, new rivals in Europe, and the falling competitiveness of
the German economy meant Volkswagen needed to do more, Blume told its
management.
Volkswagen,
whose shares closed 1.2% higher after the news, has lost almost a third of its
value over the past five years, making it the worst performer among major
European carmakers.
It faces a
challenging landscape of challenges in Europe, the U.S. and especially China,
where domestic EV makers led by BYD (002594.SZ), opens new tab are grabbing its
market share. It has lost more stock value than any major competitor over the
past two years.
Volkswagen's
plans are the latest blow to German Chancellor Olaf Scholz, whose three-way
coalition was slammed in regional votes on Sunday that saw the far-right
Alternative for Germany party top the poll in one state and come second in
Saxony.
Carsten
Brzeski, global head of macro at ING Research, said the decision highlighted
the consequences of years of economic stagnation and structural change without
growth.
"If
such an industrial heavyweight has to close factories, it may be the long
overdue wake-up call that (Germany's) economic policy measures need to be
stepped up considerably."
Germany's
economy ministry said VW management must act responsibly within a challenging
market environment, but declined to comment specifically on planned cuts.
IG Metall
said the decision "shakes the foundation" of Volkswagen, which is
Germany's largest industrial employer and Europe's top carmaker by revenue.
Cavallo said
in an interview on Volkswagen's intranet that its management had made
"many wrong decisions" in recent years, including not investing in
hybrids or being faster at developing affordable battery-electric cars.
Instead of
plant closures, the board should be reducing complexity and taking advantage of
synergies across the Volkswagen group's plans, said Cavallo.
($1 = 0.9034
euros)
Reporting by
Victoria Waldersee and Christina Amann; Additional reporting by Rachel More,
Louis van Boxel-Woolf, Rene Wagner and Nick Carey; Writing by Christoph Steitz;
Editing by Rachel More and Alexander Smith
Victoria
Waldersee
Thomson
Reuters
Autos
correspondent in Germany, covering the industry's transition to electric
vehicles. Previously reported on the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on the
retail sector in South Asia, China and Europe, and wider general news. Formerly
at YouGov and Economy, a charity working to produce accessible economics
coverage.
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