A report by Britain’s largest union, Unite which looks at the
changes facing the UK automotive industry is urging the UK
government to emulate Germany and put the UK’s car industry in the
fast lane of electric vehicle technology. The report, Electric
Vehicles, Autonomous Technology and Future Mobility, which was
launched today (Wednesday 14 March), warns that the biggest barrier
to investment and innovation remains government inactivity.
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A report by Britain’s largest union, Unite which looks at the
changes facing the UK automotive industry is urging the UK
government to emulate Germany and put the UK’s car industry in the
fast lane of electric vehicle technology.
The report, Electric Vehicles,
Autonomous Technology and Future Mobility, which was launched
today (Wednesday 14 March), warns that the biggest barrier to
investment and innovation remains government inactivity.
Laying out a roadmap to retain skills and jobs through the
transition from petrol and diesel to electric powertrains, the
report calls for a national car scrappage scheme to promote the
sustainable take up of electric vehicles.
As part of the roadmap to secure investment and remove the barriers
to the next generation of vehicles, the assessment calls for an
industrial plan. This includes:
- Greater public investment in research and development
- More investment in vital infrastructure, including charging
stations, the national grid, domestic lithium extraction and
battery recycling facilities
- Support to retool, reskill and develop the UK’s automotive
supply chain
- A ‘just’ transition plan for workers in the transport and
petroleum industries
- Use of positive procurement by local and central government
- Defending the role of safety-critical drivers in road haulage
and public transport, emulating the examples of rail and civil
aviation
The full report which was produced by a working group of Unite
car industry representatives can be viewed here.
Writing in the forward of the report, Unite general secretary Len
McCluskey said: “The automotive sector has been a major
success story of British manufacturing and our workplace reps and
stewards have played an integral role in shaping that success.
“For decades the sector has been a source of good quality
employment for hundreds of thousands of workers, in both major
assembly sites and throughout the supply chain.
“No industry is static. The emergence of electric,
internet-connected and driverless technology, herald changes unseen
since the end of the horse-drawn era.
“Unite is clear. We want investment in new sustainable technology.
We want to see high-skilled secure jobs on decent pay and for the
UK automotive sector to hold its own against Germany, the United
States, Southern Asia and China.
“The biggest barrier to investment and innovation remains
government inactivity. Without proper investment in research and
development, public infrastructure, procurement and public
transportation, the UK will continue to lag behind.”
Commenting on the launch of the report Unite assistant general
secretary for manufacturing Tony Burke said: “The government
must do more to put the UK in the fast lane of electric vehicle
technology and to secure our automotive industry’s world leading
status for the years to come.
“Unite members are already building the all-electric Nissan Leaf
and lithium-ion batteries, as well as hybrid engines for Toyota, in
addition to Geely’s electric black cabs and hydrogen buses at
Wrightbus.
“There is scope for so much more though. While BMW’s new electric
Mini will be assembled in Cowley from 2019, the fact the electric
powertrain and electric batteries will be imported from Germany
shows the urgent need to develop UK capability.
“The government must step up and remove the barriers to UK
investment and the mass take up of electric vehicles with massive
investment in infrastructure and support for re-skilling and
retooling.
“No worker must be left behind, which is why Unite stands firmly
behind our members at the Ford diesel engine plat at Dagenham and
the engine plant at Bridgend.
“These engines are already the cleanest and most efficient models
of their kind. We reiterate our call to Ford that these sites must
be repurposed for new electric models or battery technology.”
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