Volkswagen (VW) is considering closing factories in Germany for the first time, in a move that shows the mounting price pressure Europe’s top carmaker faces from Asian rivals.
Monday’s move marks the first major clash between Chief Executive Oliver Blume and unions that command substantial influence at VW.
The automaker considers one large vehicle plant and one component factory in Germany to be obsolete, said its works council as it vowed “fierce resistance” to the executive board’s plans.
Chief Financial Officer Arno Antlitz will speak to staff alongside Volkswagen brand chief Thomas Schaefer at a works council meeting on Wednesday morning.
Volkswagen’s works council head Daniela Cavallo, a member of the powerful IG Metall union, said she expects CEO Blume to get involved in negotiations too, adding that Wednesday’s meeting would be “very uncomfortable” for the group’s management.
Analysts have in the past named VW sites in Osnabrueck, in Lower Saxony and Dresden, in Saxony, as potential targets for closure.
The state of Lower Saxony is Volkswagen’s second-largest shareholder and on Monday supported its review.
The automaker, which employs around 680,000 staff, said that it also felt forced to end its job security programme, which has been in place since 1994 and prevents job cuts until 2029, adding all measures would be discussed with its works council.
IG Metall says the job security covers Volkswagen plants in Wolfsburg, Hanover, Braunschweig, Salzgitter, Kassel and Emden.
“The situation is extremely tense and cannot be overcome by simple cost-cutting measures,” Schaefer said in a statement.
VW, which drives most of Volkswagen’s unit sales, is the first of its brands to undergo a cost-cutting drive targeting ten billion euros in savings by 2026 as it attempts to streamline spending to survive the transition to electric cars.
Read more: Volkswagen and its struggle in the eMobility sector: Is its first European plant at risk?