UK car production fell -7.6% in the first six months of the year,
according to new figures published today by the Society of Motor
Manufacturers and Traders (SMMT). Factories turned out 416,074
units, 34,094 fewer than in the same period in 2023, following a
-26.6% decline in June caused by multiple model changes. The
performance was expected as manufacturers retool lines to make
electrified models following some £23.7 billion of UK investment
announced last year.1
Amid this transition, first half year electrified vehicle
(battery electric, plug-in hybrid and hybrid) production was down
-7.6%, in line with overall volumes, to 157,224 units. This
represents more than a third (37.8%) of all output, unchanged
from last year.2 In the same period, overall car
output for the UK market was up 17.7% to 106,157 units, but this
was not enough to offset a -13.9% decline in production for
export, with more than seven-in-10 cars made destined for
customers overseas.
Given the importance of exports to UK car production, the role of
free and fair global trade cannot be overstated, especially with
the EU, which remains by far the most important market for UK car
makers, taking 55.4% of all exports in the first six months,
equivalent to 171,745 units. The US, China, Turkey and Australia
made up the rest of the top five export locations, accounting for
a combined 29.4% of all overseas orders. Japan, Canada, South
Korea, UAE and Switzerland completed the top 10.
Mike Hawes, SMMT Chief Executive, said, “The UK
auto industry is moving at pace to build the next generation of
electric vehicles – a transition that can be a growth engine for
the entire British economy. The new government's commitments
to gigafactories, a decarbonised energy supply and a faster
planning system will help boost our competitiveness and
sustain employment in a sector that delivers well paid, skilled
jobs nationwide. Amid fierce global competition, however,
industry and government must work quickly to deliver those
commitments, creating an industrial strategy that enables the
growth the economy craves.”
The latest independent production outlook illustrates how the EV
transition is impacting UK light vehicle production, which is now
expected to decline -9.3% this year to around 910,000 units as
structural changes are undertaken in British plants. Output is
then set to recover to just over 1.1 million units in 2028 when
more than half of all UK car and van production is expected to be
zero emission, and reach some 1.167 million by the end of the
decade.3 With the right political, industrial and
economic conditions, by 2035 the UK could cumulatively have
produced more than nine million zero emission light vehicles –
600,000 more than anticipated under current outlooks and worth
over £290 billion at factory gate prices.4
SMMT's Vision 2035: Ready to
Grow, published in June, sets out a plan to help deliver such
conditions, focused on developing the domestic market for EVs,
industrial transformation, reskilling, providing clean energy and
ensuring free and fair trade with global markets. It dovetails
with the the new government's commitment to an industrial
strategy and its Automotive Sector Plan, and the industry is
ready to work with government to ensure the long-term success of
the sector and all those who depend on it for their mobility,
services and livelihoods.
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Notes to editors
1: SMMT calculations based on publicly announced
investment commitments, public and private, in UK
automotive production and R&D 2023 from brands
including but not limited to: MINI, JLR, Tata and Nissan.
2: 170,231 electrified vehicles made in H1 2023
3: Independent production outlook for cars and light vans
only– July 2024
4: SMMT analysis in Vision 2035: Ready to
Grow
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