
CP
Britain’s once-thriving car industry is grinding to a halt, with production levels plunging to their lowest since the 1950s—and it’s Labour’s Net Zero obsession that’s driving us off the cliff!
UK car production has slumped to levels not seen since the 1950s as more and more Brits are refusing to shift to electric vehicles.
UK vehicle production collapsed to just 905,233 units in 2024—an 11.8% drop from the year before, according to the latest figures from the Society of Motor Manufacturers and Traders (SMMT).
Car production alone plummeted 13.9%, while exports tumbled 15.5% as demand dried up, especially in key markets like the EU (-24.3%) and China (-21.8%). Meanwhile, Britain’s EV rollout is in chaos, with factories shutting down to retool for electric vehicles that the public isn’t even buying.
Labour is blindly pushing ahead with its green zealotry, forcing manufacturers into a rushed and chaotic transition to electric vehicles (EVs). The result? Jobs on the line, factories shutting down, and Britain falling further behind global competitors.
- December alone saw production fall 27.1%—the tenth straight month of decline as manufacturers scramble to meet Labour’s unrealistic deadlines for phasing out petrol and diesel cars.
- EV production down 20.4% despite £20 billion in taxpayer-backed investment since 2023.
- Exports to the EU nosedive—a stark warning that the world’s biggest car markets aren’t ready for Labour’s EV utopia either!
Labour’s refusal to reverse its outright ban on the sale of new petrol and diesel vehicles by 2030 is also leaving manufacturers in limbo.
Mounting pressure across the industry saw Vauxhall shut its Luton van-making factory in November, after hitting out at Labour’s Net Zero regulations that force manufacturers to limit sales of petrol vehicles.
In response, the Labour Government has now launched a consultation on the Zero-Emission Vehicle (ZEV) mandate, a move that could signal a softening of Net Zero targets amid growing concerns over their impact on British manufacturing.
SMMT Chief Executive Mike Hawes said:
“Amid significant geopolitical and trade tensions, UK manufacturers are set on turning billions of pounds of investment into production reality, transforming factories to make new electric vehicles for sale around the world. Growing pains are inevitable, so the drop in volumes last year is not surprising. With new, exciting models and battery production on the horizon, the potential for growth is clear. Securing this future, however, requires industrial and trade strategies that deliver the competitive conditions essential for growth amidst an increasingly protectionist global environment.”
Translation? Labour’s green fanaticism is pushing UK carmakers to the brink—and without a serious rethink on policy, Britain’s auto industry will be finished.
BRITAIN AT A CROSSROADS—TIME TO HIT THE BRAKES ON NET ZERO LUNACY!
Labour’s Net Zero madness is hammering British industry, costing jobs, investment, and our position as a global leader in car manufacturing. The numbers don’t lie:
- Production is falling
- Factories are closing
- Exports are drying up
It’s time for a reality check. Britain needs a car industry strategy that supports workers and manufacturers—not one that forces them out of business!
- Scrap the reckless EV deadlines
- Ditch the EU’s crushing regulations
- Strike a trade deal with the US and supercharge British exports!
- Reverse the ban on the sale of new petrol and diesel vehicles by 2030
Britain’s car industry is at a crossroads—we can either stay on Labour’s road to ruin or take back control and build a future that works for Britain. The choice is ours.
By Jack Lions.
This article (BRITAIN’S MOTOR INDUSTRY SLAMS INTO REVERSE AS NET ZERO MADNESS WRECKS PRODUCTION ) was created and published by Conservative Post and is republished here under “Fair Use” with attribution to the author Jack Lions
See Related Article Below
Europe’s car industry is collapsing due to the European Union’s “green” agenda; von der Leyen says she wants to reach the “net zero” targets faster
RHODA WILSON
Europe’s car industry is collapsing, primarily because of the European Commission’s “green” agenda and arrogance in failing to admit it is making a “mistake” going down this path.
As if she is some sort of saviour, Ursula von der Leyen launched a “Competitiveness Compass” and promised to trim down many of the Commission’s environmental, social and governance-inspired regulations However, it is merely more propaganda.
Regarding the net zero targets, “We stay the course. The goals are cast in stone,” von der Leyen said. “The goals stay, the objective stays, but we want to reach it better and faster. And for that, we have to reduce complexity.”
On 23 January, Automotive Manufacturing Solutions (“AMS”) published an article highlighting that European automotive suppliers and producers are confronting an existential crisis. “Mass layoffs and plummeting electric vehicle investments threaten European manufacturing,” AMS said.
In its article, AMS described the crisis that is unfolding. European automotive suppliers, including Bosch and Continental, are slashing jobs due to challenges in the electric vehicle market, with 54,000 job cuts announced in 2024. The industry is facing a “toxic mixture” of factors, including lower vehicle production, high energy and labour costs, and competition from cheaper Chinese electric vehicles (“EVs”). 65% of European automotive suppliers are struggling to maintain profit above the critical 5% investment threshold, complicating future technology investments and innovation strategies, such as smart factories.
Given mass layoffs and factory closures, some wonder if the automotive sector will survive the EU’s coming “energy transition” to alternative fuels. In the documentary below, Brussels Signal reporters talk to industry lobbyists, car salesmen, politicians and academics in an attempt to understand where the industry is going and whether the EU has made policy mistakes.
Brussels Signal: Driven To The Edge: The Collapse Of The European Car Industry, 27 January 2025 (20 mins)
“Green” policies are wreaking havoc on the European car industry. Beege Welborn explains more.
European Auto Manufacturing Confronting An ‘Existential’ Crisis
By Beege Welborn as published by Hot Air
The projections for a 2025 rebound in EV sales come on the heels of retooled models – smaller and cheaper – along with a big favourite of any industry dependent on government largesse: handouts. As much as they’d sworn not to subsidise further what they were forcing Europeans into against their will, the Brahmins of Brussels are going to have to fork over more cash.
This time, the competition from cheaper Chinese imports is the excuse for an industry that has consistently proven it cannot stand on its own feet by virtue of customer demand.
The European Union is considering using subsidies to support its electric vehicle (EV) industry. The move would aim to counter the influx of Chinese imports lowering the profit outlooks for domestic automakers.
Projections suggest that cheaper Chinese EVs could cost European automakers nearly $8 billion by 2030, according to an Allianz Trade study. In response, the EU increased tariffs on Chinese EV models in June 2024. They claim their prices were artificially low due to subsidies provided by Beijing and therefore undercutting the offerings of Europe’s own auto brands.
EU considers EV subsidies to counter Chinese competition, Straight Arrow News, 23 January 2024
At the same time that the EU is considering forking over cash because of the Chinese, manufacturers like Volkswagen are being forced to lease or sell their now excess auto plants to anyone who can pay for their upkeep – and the expensive union workers who come along with them – to try to keep the shrinking bottom line under control.
VW prepared to hand its factories to Chinese electric carmakers
Volkswagen is prepared to let Chinese electric carmakers take over production lines in its struggling factories as Germany’s automotive industry is struck by a downturn.
Executives at the car-making titan signalled they would be open to tie-ups with Chinese rivals to use up some of the excess capacity in their factories as they scale back production.
Gernot Döllner, chief executive of Volkswagen’s Audi brand, told the Financial Times that deals with electric car companies would “lower the entrance barrier of these competitors,” saying: “For sure, that is thinkable.”
David Powels, chief financial officer at Volkswagen’s eponymous VW brand, told the newspaper: “We’re open for any discussion on any topic with any partner. In a dynamic world, you have to keep all options open.”
VW prepared to hand its factories to Chinese electric carmakers, The Telegraph, 27 January 2025
As if that weren’t enough, EU manufacturers, again like VW, are staring at massive fines coming down the pipe because they cannot meet the artificial sales goals set by those same bureaucrats in Brussels.
A $1.6 Billion Bill Is Coming
Speaking to analysts on a call on Wednesday, VW’s head of investor relations, Rolf Woller, spoke about potential penalties for exceeding the EU’s emissions targets. The company estimates that, if they are to fail in meeting those targets, they’ll be landed with a 1.5 billion Euro ($1.6 billion at current exchange rates) bill.
And it’s looking increasingly likely that they won’t be able to meet the EU’s target. Volkswagen didn’t launch any new EVs last year, nor will they offer anything this year. Instead, we’ll have to wait until 2026 until the new ID.2 makes an appearance. Bloomberg relates how [VW’s head of investor relations Rolf] Woller also spoke on VW’s shrinking bottom line, which is further eroded by VW having to sell more EVs at the expense of more profitable combustion-engine models. [Emphasis added]
VW Stares Down The Barrel Of $1.6 Billion Fine, Car Scoops, 23 January 2025
This is a snek-meet-tail (snake-meet-tail) situation, if ever there was one. Nothing is driving this disaster but artificial goals set by authoritarian climate cultists with zero understanding of how the real world works. Until leadership experiences a radical shift in Brussels or individual governments in Europe itself can declare some sort of regulatory independence from crippling rules and sanctions, this is a doom loop.
The EU proved that with their newly announced “revised” plans to “revive” innovation and remove red tape. Everyone’s favourite Bond villainess was practically giddy telling the world, “See? We can be reasonable!”
It is time to restart Europe’s innovation engine.
We have the Compass.
We have the political will.
Now, what matters is speed and unity.
Because the world is not waiting for us ↓ https://t.co/4iollrSWxi
— Ursula von der Leyen (@vonderleyen) January 29, 2025
This is great at a press conference but when you read into it, they haven’t changed a thing of substance and are relying on slogans to act as if everything’s copacetic now.
… Von der Leyen stressed that the commission would maintain its targets to cut net greenhouse gas emissions by 55 per cent by 2030 and have them at zero by 2050.
“We stay the course. The goals are cast in stone,” she said. “The goals stay, the objective stays, but we want to reach it better and faster. And for that, we have to reduce complexity.”
According to the EC, there were three core areas for action: Technological innovation, decarbonisation with the upcoming Clean Industrial Deal and focusing on affordable energy and security.
… Businesses have [been] struggling with high energy costs and low investments, a product, according to many, of misguided green policies.
To address this, the EC promised to trim down many of its environmental, social and governance inspired regulations.
… Instead of targeting entire industries with emission directives, the EC said it would prioritise the 100 most emitting sites accounting for more than half of Europe’s industrial emissions.
Low carbon products, such as “green steel,” would still be supported, it added, despite little success in that sector so far. [emphasis added]
EC President von der Leyen pledges to simplify regulations but holds on to ‘green’ agenda, Brussels Signal, 30 January 2025
There is so much argle-bargle cheerleading in the “new and improved” version that sticks to what caused the problem initially as far as REAL manufacturing issues go, this can only be viewed as a propaganda piece.
The continent isn’t a one-off, either. I’ve covered the state of the British auto industry time and again, thanks to Green Dreams, and they’re sinking away.
Vehicle production dips amid EV transformation and intense market pressure
🚗British vehicle production slips -11.8% to 905,233 units in 2024, with cars down to 779,584, as industry continues transformation to EV production
🚚4.0% growth in commercial vehicle production fails to… pic.twitter.com/IIYc3FFNRp— SMMT (@SMMT) January 30, 2025
With the precarious state of German manufacturing in general …
… Timo Wollmershäuser, of the Ifo Institute in Munich, said: “Germany is going through by far the longest phase of stagnation in post-war history. It is also falling behind considerably in an international comparison.” [Emphasis added]
VW prepared to hand its factories to Chinese electric carmakers, The Telegraph, 27 January 2025
… paying fines repeatedly with numbers like these is potentially ruinous.
They are also one more stake in the heart of Green Dreams in the country as the snap-elections draw ever closer.

This article (Europe’s car industry is collapsing due to the European Union’s “green” agenda; von der Leyen says she wants to reach the “net zero” targets faster) was created and published by The Expose and is republished here under “Fair Use” with attribution to the author Beege Welborn
••••
The Liberty Beacon Project is now expanding at a near exponential rate, and for this we are grateful and excited! But we must also be practical. For 7 years we have not asked for any donations, and have built this project with our own funds as we grew. We are now experiencing ever increasing growing pains due to the large number of websites and projects we represent. So we have just installed donation buttons on our websites and ask that you consider this when you visit them. Nothing is too small. We thank you for all your support and your considerations … (TLB)
••••
Comment Policy: As a privately owned web site, we reserve the right to remove comments that contain spam, advertising, vulgarity, threats of violence, racism, or personal/abusive attacks on other users. This also applies to trolling, the use of more than one alias, or just intentional mischief. Enforcement of this policy is at the discretion of this websites administrators. Repeat offenders may be blocked or permanently banned without prior warning.
••••
Disclaimer: TLB websites contain copyrighted material the use of which has not always been specifically authorized by the copyright owner. We are making such material available to our readers under the provisions of “fair use” in an effort to advance a better understanding of political, health, economic and social issues. The material on this site is distributed without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving it for research and educational purposes. If you wish to use copyrighted material for purposes other than “fair use” you must request permission from the copyright owner.
••••
Disclaimer: The information and opinions shared are for informational purposes only including, but not limited to, text, graphics, images and other material are not intended as medical advice or instruction. Nothing mentioned is intended to be a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis or treatment.
Disclaimer: The views and opinions expressed in this article are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the official policy or position of The Liberty Beacon Project.
Leave a Reply