Siemens promises UK investment despite Brexit warning

Blackleaf

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German industrial giant Siemens has said it will continue to invest in the UK, despite earlier warnings that a vote to leave the EU could affect its future activities in the country.

Siemens chief executive Joe Kaeser told a number of media organisations that the company remained fully committed to manufacturing in the UK.

The company has 13 plants in the UK and employs about 14,000 people.

Siemens promises UK investment despite Brexit warning


BBC News
12 July 2016


Siemens's chief Joe Kaeser said the UK remained a "good place to do business"

German industrial giant Siemens has said it will continue to invest in the UK, despite earlier warnings that a vote to leave the EU could affect its future activities in the country.

Siemens chief executive Joe Kaeser told a number of media organisations that the company remained fully committed to manufacturing in the UK.

The company has 13 plants in the UK and employs about 14,000 people.

Siemens UK had warned investment could be hit if the UK voted to leave the EU.

The engineering and technology giant manufactures and exports high value goods including MRI scanners and gas turbines.

At an event at the House of Commons, Mr Kaeser said the UK continued to matter and be a "good place to do business" whether it was inside or outside the EU.

But he called on Theresa May to clarify the UK's trade position as soon as possible to give business some certainty.

Trade barriers

Ahead of the referendum, the company was vocal in expressing its fears about the negative effects of Brexit.

In the spring, it told its workforce that increased costs and uncertainty caused by the UK leaving the EU could make the UK a less attractive country to do business in.

The giant conglomerate also warned that its plans to export wind turbine blades from a new facility in Hull were being put on hold.



The £310m manufacturing hub in the city will employ about 1,000 people.

The company has insisted this investment will continue and will be used to meet local demand, but Mr Kaeser said new trade barriers could make it uneconomical to export the blades to Denmark and Germany.

The company's links with the UK go back 170 years.


Siemens promises UK investment despite Brexit warning - BBC News
 
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MHz

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Red Deer AB
It probably employed 1,000 just for the artwork (and virtual walk-through) Considering the controllers they make are used worldwide it would not look good if they did a Cuba like blockade of the UK. That being said, having permission from the head office in Germany at allow the UK to manufacture spare parts for the controllers they have but new hardware will go to other nations first and that will be manufactured in Germany.
 

Blackleaf

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It's the same with German cars. The UK is the world's largest market for overrated German cars and the Bosch are hardly going to want to stop selling their cars to the British just because they have left the EUSSR.