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They will be made in China anyway, and we want to concentrate on Hydrogen.
.Glyn. I will bet you anything you want that within ten years the biggest origin of cars sold in Europe will not be made in Europe, but in China or India. In fact like Volvo there is a good chance that most European car manufactures will be owned by Chinese and Indian companies anyway. Tata anyone?
Yes Glyn, but the price differential between products from those countries and the developed economies means that any tariff barrier will be absorbed.The UK getting into a tariff war with China would have serious implications for the UK economy.
By the sounds of it vauxhalls plans involve reducing significantly the British parts in the cars hence the lack of compatibility. Addressing that should be key.
Glyn,Are we talking about components fully manufactured abroad and simply shipped to destination for assembly, or raw materials brought in to make key components here (like for batteries), or both?
It appears to me that this specific part of the EU-UK trade deal was negotiated in good faith and with the best of mutual intentions i.e. retaining/encouraging the motor industry supply chain in the EU/UK.It would appear that the negotiators were overly optimistic in the time it would take to get battery factories up and running in the Europe.This is fixable through renegotiation which again would be to the UK/EU's mutual benefit given manufacturers on both sides of the Channel are lobbying for the same.Regardless of Brexit, this specific part of the trade deal or the way the EU operates the building of battery plants is crucial to the future of the UK/EU motor industry.It is not the fault of Brexit, the trade deal or the EU that many European countries' Governments (inc the UK) have been slow in supporting getting these plants off the ground.In fact the existence of this deal and the deadlines included would appear to provide an additional incentive for European nations to get themselves into gear on the key issue of getting these battery plants up and running quickly.
The number of cars built in the UK was 775k in 2022. Down from nearly 1.7m in 2016.I forget. What happened in 2016?