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Honda may be planning to sideline its car manufacturing plant in Swindon because Britain under Gordon Brown “shows no sign of joining the euro”.
The comments yesterday by Takeo Fukui, the president of the Japanese car giant, are the strongest danger signal ever raised over the future of Honda’s plant in Swindon.
Mr Fukui acknowledged in May that the facility in Wiltshire had been “something of a mistake”.
Mr Fukui has already said that he has no plans to expand Honda’s operations in the UK.
He strongly hinted yesterday that Swindon would eventually be reduced to building cars only for the British market, rather than becoming the European manufacturing hub that it was originally intended to be.
“When we built our factory in Swindon,” he said, “we did so because the UK suggested it would join the eurozone.
"On closer inspection, it now seems definite that Britain will not join the euro, so we may need to come up with other options to supply cars to Europe.”
Mr Fukui added that 15 years since being built, only half of the Swindon plant’s present output is sold into the British market, raising concerns that as the factory is reduced to supply only UK customers, its overall capacity will be cut back.
In 2003 Mr Fukui was among a small group of Japanese carmakers who hosted Tony Blair at a meeting near Mount Fuji, where they pressed the former prime minister on his intentions over the euro.
Asked whether he was likely to lobby Gordon Brown in a similar way, Mr Fukui said: “We don’t expect Britain to join just because we ask — all we can do is state our position.”
Honda’s investment plans in Europe are likely to focus on eurozone countries and Turkey, where it already has a factory.
In a recent interview with The Times, Carlos Ghosn, the Nissan chief executive, said that he did not regard Britain’s failure to join the euro as a reason to pull back from investment in the UK.
He said that he would “fight hard” to maintain the competitiveness of the company’s plant in Sunderland.
Yesterday Honda announced big expansion plans for East Asia. The company said that it would become the world's first foreign carmaker to develop and market cars under an original brand in China.
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The CEO of Honda is using arm twisiting methods. Whereas the UK pound is strong and makes imports from UK expensive,the gain in foreign exchange when you translate the profits /local earning which are in pounds to Yen Or Dollars,etc you will understand why it makes sense to produce in UK.Japanese staff who transfer their offshore salaries to Japan would attest to this. Cars are about quality and UK build top quality cars. Turkey has no history of qualitative production/poorer work culture and support services will be so poor ,that HONDA will regret the move.
richard n, Lagos, Nigeria
More manufacturing and engineering jobs on the line. This is a direct result of the madness of Gordon Brown's 'Square Mile' economic strategy, which is all very well if you are from the affluent South East of England but for the rest of Britain above the Watford Gap. when will this government follow a meaningful economic policy that helps manufacturing? When will the DTI actually do something other than lip service to help real industries such as the re-starting production at MG Rover's plant in Longbridge? And when will Gordon Brown realise that he has failed the people of the Midlands and North West by pandering to the whims of the retail, finance and service sector?
i'll let my feelings known at the next General Election.
Simon Robinson, Burnley Lancashire, Britain
My last car i bought in may last year was built in swindon and the build quality was awful maybe this is one of the reasons why?
geoff howard, eastbourne, uk
Since when has Turkey been a member of the Eurozone? This is about moving production to a country where workers are paid a lot less. This is a spin job worthy of Tony Blair.
Kevin McCarthy, teddington, England
Fair enough, thereâs plenty of choice out there; now I know my next vehicle certainly isnât going to be a Honda.
sean dunne , Louth,