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Volkswagen labour leaders stand by 'red line' on plant closures
Reuters | May 15, 2026 3:57 PM CST

Synopsis

In a firm stand against potential factory closures in Germany, Volkswagen's labor representatives have voiced their commitment to preserving jobs. While they acknowledge the need for discussions about less active production sites, their position is grounded in a 2024 restructuring agreement.

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FILE PHOTO: Volkswagen's margins have been eroded by weak demand and a costly transition to ​electric vehicles.
BERLIN: Top labour representatives at Volkswagen said they would not allow plants to be closed, while remaining open to proposals to secure the future of under-used production sites in Germany, according to a joint statement ‌to Reuters on ⁠Friday. Volkswagen ⁠is looking to cut excess capacity in its German production network without resorting to factory closures - something ruled out under a 2024 restructuring deal with unions - with defence partnerships and Chinese collaboration floated as possible options.

The head of the powerful works council, Daniela Cavallo, IG Metall union head Christiane Benner and regional union leader Thorsten Groeger said that the 2024 deal and its ​commitment to German plants must not be called into question.

"The ⁠fundamental situation ‌has not changed - nor have the red lines set by the ​employee side," ​they said. "With us as the general works council and IG Metall, ⁠there will be no plant closures."


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Volkswagen's margins have been eroded by ​weak demand and a costly transition to electric vehicles. Pressure has ​only grown in recent years due to fierce competition from China and tariff hikes, while conflict in the Middle East is driving up costs and uncertainty.

After reporting another profit slump at the start of the year, CEO Oliver Blume doubled down on his quest for further savings. He floated the possibility of a plant-sharing deal with Chinese partners to ‌address overcapacity - though no talks have been confirmed - while progressing negotiations over a possible sale of Volkswagen's Osnabrueck plant to a defence company.

At a ​conference hosted ​by the FT in ⁠London this week, Volkswagen brand chief Thomas Schaefer said the group was working to adjust excess volumes and referred to plant closures as "the second-best option".

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The labour officials pledged an open ​mind to proposals both within the group or with external partners, provided they uphold commitments made by management in 2024.

Cavallo, Benner and Groeger said their principles of quality work, career prospects and job security still stand, adding that they would fight anything that runs counter to those principles with all their might, both now and in the future.


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