Consultancy identifies Honda ‘winners and losers’
Thomas Cullen of consultancy Transport Intelligence says Honda’s plan to shut its Swindon Assembly plant in 2021 has little to do with local politics and everything to do with the changing nature of the automotive supply chain.
The implications for logistics service providers are significant. Some, such deep-sea car carriers will benefit, others will suffer badly.
That Swindon was vulnerable to closure was something that those in the automotive sector were aware of for several years. The fundamental problem was that, despite its models excellent engineering, Honda did not sell enough cars in Europe and the UK. This meant smaller throughput volumes and lower profitability for the Swindon assembly plant. Recent trends reflected a vehicle manufacturer that had almost given up on the European market, with the Swindon plant having concentrated production on the 2016 Civic, a new design whose aesthetics reflected that its core market would be in the US, not Europe.
The only other assembly plant in the region is the small facility at Gebze in Turkey. This will remain open beyond the end of the present Civic model’s life, although Honda’s statement seems less than emphatic about its future.
There is some irony that the reduction in trade barriers resulting from treaties such as the Japan-EU Free trade agreement has made such plant closures more common. In such a trading environment, the production logistics logic of centralising assembly at a global level is slightly stronger, leading to marginal models such as the Nissan X-Trail or Honda Civic being more attractive to make in a fewer, larger locations. This logic has limits due to the influence of currency uncertainty, nonetheless an increase in the global movement of passenger cars is likely.
Most importantly, Honda, like all vehicle manufacturers is facing existential pressure from the shift in technology. The demand to fund research into both electric vehicles and digital guidance systems is putting a huge strain on their balance sheets and forcing them to re-evaluate their corporate strategies. Every plant investment is being re-assessed and a new emphasis is being placed on returns on investment. In such an environment all but the most profitable assembly plants are vulnerable.





