Toyota Motor Corp. will keep its plant in Britain as the sole European producer of its Auris hatchback in a bet the country can remain competitive after it negotiates an exit from the European Union next year.
The world’s second-biggest auto manufacturer will make the third-generation Auris at its Burnaston factory near Derby in northern England, powered by engines from the Deeside facility in Wales, it said on its website Wednesday.
The announcement on the Auris isn’t a complete surprise. The company said last year it would spend 240 million pounds ($333 million) on updating equipment and technology in Burnaston. Still, the automotive giant’s longer-term commitment to Britain remains at stake.
‘Pragmatic’ Decision
“I think it’s a pragmatic decision,” said Ian Henry, director of automotive consultancy AutoAnalysis. “We don’t know how Brexit is going to pan out. If we get tariff-free trade, they’ll probably find a way of muddling through.”
The Burnaston plant was established in 1989 as Toyota’s first major bridgehead in Europe and was also a pioneer of hybrid-vehicle manufacturing.
U.K. Business Secretary Greg Clark said continued production of the Auris had been secured with the help of more than 20 million pounds in state funding toward the installation of Toyota’s new global production platform and signals that Britain can remain a major player in the sector.
If Prime Minister Theresa May gets her way, by next year Britain will start severing ties with the bloc after a transition period, including quitting the customs union it’s been part of since 1973. Whether duties are imposed after that is still up in the air as London and Brussels wrangle over the terms of their divorce.
Tariffs and other hurdles to trade could be disastrous for the U.K. industry since parts routinely move across borders several times during the manufacturing process.
PSA Group’s Vauxhall Motors is fighting to retain production of the Astra hatchback, while Jaguar Land Rover, owned by India’s Tata Motors Ltd., will slow production in the second quarter amid uncertainty over Brexit and a slump in demand for diesel vehicles in the wake of the Volkswagen AG emissions scandal.