UK car manufacturing output fell by -7.0% in April, down to
61,820 units, according to new figures published today by the
Society of Motor Manufacturers and Traders (SMMT). It was the
second consecutive monthly decline, reflecting factory
adjustments in preparation for next generation models and their
electrified powertrains.
Output for the UK – at 14,021 units – rose 19.8% but failed to
offset a -12.7% decline in production for overseas buyers to
47,799 units, with nearly eight in 10 cars made shipped to global
markets. The European Union took the majority of car exports
(55.8%) followed by the US (15.2%), China (5.4%), Turkey (4.2%)
and Australia (2.8%). Shipments to the US and Turkey rose, with
those to the EU, China and Australia all experiencing double
digit declines.
Electrified vehicle (battery electric, plug-in hybrid and hybrid)
volumes represented 40.5%, up from 37.7%, of all production with
manufacturers producing a combined 25,031 units, a modest
0.1% rise on the previous year, constrained by the transition of
factories to new models and technology.
Mike Hawes, SMMT Chief Executive, said, “Another
month of falling UK car production was expected given the
significant transformation underway within factories as
manufacturers retool to produce new models. Keeping this progress
on track is essential and requires favourable industrial and
market conditions. With a general election in a matter of weeks,
the next government must ensure the conditions are right not just
for the competitiveness of UK manufacturing, but for the
investment required to transition the sector to a net zero
future.”
Ahead of the general election, SMMT is calling for the next
government to adopt five key pledges set out in its Manifesto 2030 as part
of a dedicated industrial strategy.1 These
include delivering low cost zero carbon energy, ensuring a
skilled workforce fit for the future, securing free trade deals
with existing and emerging markets, and backing the domestic
market for new electric vehicles. Doing so would bolster the
sector's competitiveness and, given the regional importance of
automotive manufacturing sites, drive economic growth and job
prosperity across the country while delivering on environmental
ambitions.
UK car manufacturing output is now down -0.8% on 2023 volumes in
the year to date, with more than a quarter of a million (284,191)
units produced. Exports have fallen -8.7% to 209,458 units, while
production for the UK is up 31.0% to 74,733 units. The latest
independent production outlook expects UK car and light van
production to fall -6.2% to some 940,000 units this year, before
returning to growth in 2025 and surpassing a million units from
2026 before reaching 1.2 million later this decade.2
|
|
|
|
|
|
Notes to editors
1: Manifesto 2030: Automotive Growth for a Zero Emission
Future - published June 2023
2: Based on AutoAnalysis independent Production Outlook
report, March 2024
|