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Stellantis to shut down Vauxhall’s Luton plant - 1,100 jobs at risk

Zero emissions, zero jobs.

Stellantis Luton plant
Photo by: Stellantis

Automotive behemoth Stellantis has announced the impending closure of its venerable Vauxhall van factory in Luton. Come April, the assembly lines will grind to a halt, and by June, the plant will be but a memory. This decision puts approximately 1,100 jobs on the chopping block, leaving workers feeling "betrayed" and "let down" by the company's owner, Stellantis, Autocar reports.

“Production will cease in Luton in Q2 2025, with a period of transforming and transferring machinery and process knowledge to Ellesmere Port. Production of the group’s medium all-electric LCV range (eK0) in Ellesmere Port will commence in Q4 2026,” a statement from Stellantis reads.

Apparently, Stellantis has a plan. The company intends to consolidate its UK operations by shifting production to the Ellesmere Port facility in Cheshire. This site, which has recently undergone a £100 million transformation, is now the UK's first and only volume EV-only manufacturing plant, producing a range of electric light commercial vehicles (LCVs).

To sweeten the deal, Stellantis is proposing an additional £50 million investment to bolster Ellesmere Port's capacity to handle the increased workload. The company claims this move will create a sustainable vehicle hub, aligning with the UK's push towards electric vehicles.

However, not everyone is convinced. Unite the Union has slammed the decision, calling it "a total disgrace" and a "betrayal" of the workforce. The union argues that the closure is a shortsighted move that disregards the plant's long-standing contribution to the UK's automotive industry.


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The backdrop to this drama is the UK's Zero Emission Vehicle (ZEV) mandate, which requires manufacturers to sell a certain percentage of electric vehicles each year. Stellantis has been vocal about its concerns, arguing that the mandate is "hurting significantly our business model" due to a lack of consumer incentives and a downturn in EV interest.

As the dust settles, the fate of the Luton workers remains uncertain. Stellantis has stated that it hopes to transfer "hundreds" of jobs to Ellesmere Port, but for many, the future is as murky as a British winter morning.

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