The government must ‘take back control’ and support the
automotive sector if plans announced today (Tuesday 4 February) to
phase out diesel, petrol and hybrid vehicles by 2035 are to be
successful, Unite, the UK and Ireland’s largest union, has warned.
Unite said that without an integrated industrial strategy to
deliver joined up, government led intervention on a range of
fronts, the transition from combustion engines to electric vehicles
will not be possible in the...Request free trial
The government must ‘take back
control’ and support the automotive sector if
plans announced today (Tuesday 4 February) to phase out diesel,
petrol and hybrid vehicles by 2035 are to be successful, Unite, the
UK and Ireland’s largest union, has warned.
Unite said that without an integrated
industrial strategy to deliver joined up, government led
intervention on a range of fronts, the transition from combustion
engines to electric vehicles will not be possible in the timeframe
and worse will only harm the UK’s ‘jewel in the
crown’ automotive sector alongside the jobs and
communities it
supports.
Neither big fleet nor private customers
will commit to purchasing electric vehicles until confident that
the infrastructure to support them is in place and economies of
scale reduce the current extortionate purchase costs, the union
said.
Unite warned that without direct government
support and intervention, today’s announcement is little more than
a soundbite, only serving to further depress the industry, drive
investment from UK shores and undermine efforts to encourage the
trade-in of older more polluting
vehicles.
Unite assistant general secretary
Steve Turner said: “The challenges of the climate
emergency are all around us. We understand and support the drive to
clean up our air and to do so as quickly as the technology will
allow. Indeed, Unite supported Labour’s Green New Deal proposals
for the automotive sector that had an even more ambitious
transition target of 2030. But what it also had, and what today’s
announcement lacks, was a clear, government led, interventionist
industrial strategy to ensure a just transition and to deliver real
change on the
ground.
“To support such a
transition to electric vehicles, government must replace its ‘take
back control’ rhetoric and put in place practical detailed actions
to deliver a national charging network, invest in 15-minute fast
charge facilities on motorways and service stations and standardise
plug-in and charging
regimes.
“But more than this, to
maintain the UK’s world class vehicle manufacturing sector,
government must lead the way in investment in UK battery
manufacturing (giga-factories), powertrain and transmission
production, and ensuring component manufacture comes back to the
UK, reducing the carbon footprint of extended global supply chains
and supporting good jobs, skills and apprenticeships in our
regions.
“Unite understands the
challenges we face and supports our companies looking to invest in
full electric vehicle production, both battery and hydrogen. But we
also recognise the role of hybrid technologies in this transition.
The government’s inclusion of hybrid vehicles in its 2035 ban could
do enormous damage to the sector. We ask that this be reviewed with
the industry and union to find an acceptable and achievable pathway
to decarbonising the
sector.
“We also recognise the
tremendous challenges to transitioning away from diesel for our
bus, coach and commercial fleets over such a short timeframe and
urge government to join us in developing a workable plan to achieve
real progress
here.
“The stark choice for government
is to support our automotive sector now, so it is ready to meet the
challenges ahead or watch it drain away as global corporations with
options choose to invest overseas and import to meet UK demand. The
later does nothing to address the global challenges of climate
change while the former can position us as world leaders for the
coming 50 years and
beyond.
“Soundbite announcements like
this are simply not good enough. We need to move beyond the
rhetoric and truly take back control of our economy, use public
procurement to pump prime production and reduce vehicle costs, roll
out infrastructure and remove older dirtier cars from our
roads.
“We challenge government to step
up to the plate and work with both industry and unions to ensure
any transition is managed in a just way, without crashing the car
industry in the process and while committing to a interventionist
industrial strategy that is the key to making a 2035 phase out a
success for UK Plc, consumers, our planet and a public already
gagging for fresh
air.”