Why rule of origin is a Brexit time bomb – Autocar Professional

Posted: January 19, 2021 at 8:53 am

Feet up, mug of tea in hand and breathe. Time to tick Brexit off your worries list? Dont you believe it, because among the devilish details (most of which present more difficulties than impossibilities, thereby still eating time and expense) lurks a ticking time bomb that threatens to destabilisethe UK car industryunless urgent action is taken.

It relates to a requirement for the UK or EU content of cars to ramp up between now and 2027, with aparticular emphasis on the entire battery in any EV being sourcedfrom either of the regions by that date. Failure to meet these rules of origin will result in 10% tariffs being added that would threaten the value of assembling cars in the UK.

If you judge on EVs UK market share of 6.6% last year, you might well see it as an issue gladly kicked down the road, but the trajectory of uptake is heading only one way to 2030 and beyond.

Some 200,000 today work in vehicle manufacturing and its supply chain, many in jobs, most notably engine-related, that are on a path to no longer existing.

The choice is between encouraging battery makers to invest in the UK (gigafactories cost billions, take around two years to build and need very complex supply chains) or giving away the skills and employment opportunities and importing from the EU, asMinidoes on a relatively small scale forthe Electric(proving that the objections over complexity and cost are surmountable, at least).

At present, the latter looks more likely than the former. Today we have one battery facility in Sunderland, built byNissanto supportLeaf EV production, now sold but still supplying the factory and a second at the late planning stage, being set up by Britishvolt, a start-up thats set to launch in 2024 to supply a currently unknown customer base.

Sunderland makes about 2GW of batteries per year, andBritishvoltwill take that figure to 15GW, or enough to make around 250,000 EVs. In normal times, the UK makes around 1.3 million cars annually, so the need to scale up again if we want homegrown production beyond 2030 is clear.

Yet for now, theres no visible queue of willing investors or government encouragement to make the UK look more enticing to investors. Meanwhile, EU nations are fast-tracking their plans and getting a headstart on developing the infrastructure that will be at the heart of the industry in the future.

Our place in the car-making hierarchy right now drives huge amounts of employment, revenue and investment. But without long-term planning, a large slice of its competitiveness is going to come back into the spotlight in just a few years.

/news-international/why-rule-of-origin-is-a-brexit-time-bomb-78279 Why rule of origin is a Brexit time bomb Failure to meet these rules of origin will result in 10% tariffs being added that would threaten the value of assembling cars in the UK. https://www.autocarpro.in/Utils/ImageResizer.ashx?n=http://img.haymarketsac.in/autocarpro/6329563f-d6dc-4d13-8a5d-571b28141915.jpg

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Why rule of origin is a Brexit time bomb - Autocar Professional

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