Nissan ‘says Sunderland plant could close’ if UK excluded from Made in Europe rules

A picture


The Japanese carmaker Nissan has reportedly said it could be forced to close its plant in Sunderland if the UK is not fully included in new “Made in Europe” manufacturing rules proposed by the EU,The UK car industry trade representative group also said it was “gravely concerned” about the proposals, which it said could damage the £70bn annual cross-channel trade,Under the EU plans, public subsidies to speed up the development of electric vehicles would only be available to EVs made in European plants,Announced by the EU industrial strategy commissioner, Stéphane Séjourné, on Wednesday, the proposed Industrial Accelerator Act (IAA) is designed to protect the bloc from cheap competition from China,According to reports on Thursday, Nissan has privately warned the UK government it could be forced to close if the proposals became law.

One industry executive told the Financial Times Nissan could face “an existential threat” if it was “frozen out of access to EU incentives”,The company’s Sunderland site is Britain’s biggest car factory, with 6,000 employees and the theoretical ability to make 600,000 cars a year,However, it is operating significantly below capacity because of lower demand,Nissan refused to comment on the reports, but a source indicated that while the carmaker had not threatened to close the factory, it was “fair to say” it had concerns about the rules concerning procurement of corporate fleets and small EVs locking UK-based companies out,The British car industry said the attempt to prioritise EU-made products to accelerate green tech including electric vehicles must include trusted partners in the UK.

Mike Hawes, the chief executive of the Society of Motor Manufacturers and Traders, the main UK auto sector lobby group, said: “The UK automotive sector is gravely concerned by [the] ‘Made in Europe’ proposals set out in the European Commission’s Industrial Accelerator Act.As drafted, it would discriminate against UK-made vehicles and components, damaging a trading relationship worth almost £70bn annually.”He said he feared the IAA would “effectively put UK manufacturers at a systemic competitive disadvantage in the EU market”, adding that the proposals, as they stood, “may also be in breach of the EU-UK trade cooperation agreement – the Brexit deal”.It is understood the cause of concern is the third annex of the proposal, which shows how corporate fleets – which account for the majority of car sales and feed into the secondhand car market – could benefit from public subsidy.The requirement for them to be assembled in the EU could rule UK cars out of that market.

The German car industry body, the VDA, has also raised concerns, saying protective measures could raise costs for manufacturers and drivers.It is also concerned that the rules could trigger countermeasures from other countries vital for EU exports.“In its current form, the IAA will not be able to significantly strengthen the competitiveness of industry in Germany and Europe.Its industrial policy impact will unfortunately be extremely limited,” the VDA’s president, Hildegard Müller, said.Hawes called on the British government and its European counterparts to work together to “urgently resolve the situation” by extending “full trusted partner status to the UK auto sector”.

A spokesperson for Nissan said: “A simple solution would be to apply the equivalent to Union origin rules across all types of EV support, which would be in line with the EU’s goal of making regulations easier to understand and apply,”A European Commission spokesperson said: “The IAA is open to the UK when it comes to public procurement and public support schemes for electric vehicles,“The greening corporate vehicles proposal, on the other hand, limits financial support for the uptake of corporate cars and vans to zero or low-emission vehicles made in the EU,“The IAA confirms that such financial support for corporate vehicles will be limited to vehicles made in the EU,”Both proposals have to be agreed by EU member states and the European parliament, a process that will involve amendments.

A UK government spokesperson said it was talking to the car industry to understand its concerns.The business secretary, Peter Kyle, visited Brussels last week to make the case for the UK to be included as a full partner in the “Made in Europe” initiative.However, he did not meet Séjourné, the architect of the proposals.The commissioner said on Wednesday that third-party countries would not be excluded if they had a trade agreement with the EU, although this would change if they took measures to favour their homegrown industries, such as buy Canadian or buy American policies.Prof Simone Tagliapietra, a senior fellow at the Bruegel thinktank in Brussels, said: “In its final version, the proposed Industrial Accelerator Act has abandoned the pure ‘Made in Europe’ approach, opening it up to third countries – what we might call ‘Made with Europe’.

This is a welcome step, aligning EU industrial and trade policies as it should be.”
sportSee all
A picture

‘That person has gone’: Lewis Hamilton ditches despair for feelgood Ferrari reboot

In the dying embers of the 2025 Formula One season there was a period when Lewis Hamilton, one of the greatest drivers of all time, seemed cut from an almost unrecognisable cloth. The confidence, humour and calm assurance in his own abilities had been stripped away, replaced by an almost despairing bewilderment.It was so alien to his usual character that many considered it a wonder that he was managing to drag himself on to see the year out. In the buildup to this weekend’s season-opening Australian Grand Prix in Melbourne, Hamilton was typically forthright in acknowledging it had been something of a psychological break.“I lost sight for a second of who I was,” he said

A picture

India hold off brave England and brilliant Bethell to reach T20 World Cup final

England, India and the Wankhede Stadium ground staff conjured a ludicrous, blockbuster semi-final, but for the English in the end it was a bust, a night when records fell, and they eventually went with them.Only three times in their history have they scored more than the 246 they got on Thursday, but still it was not enough. Never before have so many runs been scored in a T20 World Cup match, nor as many sixes (34), nor more sixes in an innings than India’s 19. Neither England nor India had ever conceded as many runs in any T20 anywhere as they did here. It was dizzying stuff, ending in appropriate style with Jofra Archer scoring sixes off the last three legal deliveries to trim the winning margin to just seven runs

A picture

Seven countries to boycott Paralympics ceremony over flag-flying Russians

Seven countries and the British government will boycott the opening ceremony of the Winter Paralympics in protest at the inclusion of Russian and Belarusian athletes.The International Paralympic Committee (IPC) said the Czech Republic, Estonia, Finland, Latvia, Lithuania, Poland and Ukraine would not be sending athletes or officials to the ceremony on Friday night.Other countries – including Great Britain – have said they will not be sending athletic representation due to the imminent start of competition. The IPC estimates fewer than 60% of the competing countries will send a full delegation to the 2,000-year-old Arena di Verona.The UK government confirmed there would be no representatives attending the event and reiterated its opposition to Russian athletes competing under their own flag

A picture

Jennifer Shahade: ‘There’s a long and embedded history of abuse in chess’

The former US women’s champion changed her life and her sport when she made allegations against a grandmaster. Now she’s turned her hand to writing and pokerOn 15 February 2023, Jennifer Shahade took a deep breath and wrote “Time’s up” above a long message about allegations of sexual abuse in the cloistered world of professional chess. Shahade knew her words would have an impact but she didn’t expect the social media post to go viral and change her life.A two-time US women’s chess champion, Shahade chose her words carefully as she made serious allegations against Alejandro Ramirez, a then 34-year-old grandmaster from Costa Rica who was based in America and coached the St Louis University chess team: “Currently there are multiple investigations [into] Alejandro Ramirez and sexual misconduct, including a series of alleged incidents involving a minor. I was assaulted by him twice, nine and 10 years ago

A picture

From a 19-time world champ to Monster Mike: US athletes to watch at the 2026 Winter Paralympics

The first-time Paralympian only turned 19 at the start of March, but she has been in the news for her skiing prowess since she was a second-grader. She’s also going to Italy on a roll, having reached the podium in two World Cup downhill races in early February. In the 2024-25 season, she had two World Cup podium finishes in giant slalom, and she took bronze in giant slalom and fifth in slalom at the world championships, where the other three events were canceled. Though she was born without her lower right arm, she was still an honorable mention All-State softball player in Colorado.In 2018, Adicoff graduated from Bowdoin, where he competed alongside able-bodied athletes on the cross-country ski team, and won silver at the Paralympics in the same year

A picture

Emma Raducanu hopes to rediscover ‘natural’ style that has been ‘coached out of me’

Emma Raducanu says she is ­determined to wrest back control of her style of play, with the British No 1 eager not to be bound by the diktats of a single coach.“I want to come back to my ­natural way of playing,” she told BBC Sport. “That takes time to relearn because that’s something that has been coached out of me a little bit.“I have had a lot of people ­telling me what to do, how to play, and it hasn’t necessarily fit. I don’t ­necessarily want to have one coach in the role because anyone I bring in is straight away going to be scrutinised – even if it’s a trial