Currently reading: Jaguar Land Rover halts production at Castle Bromwich
JLR cites supplier issues as the reason for the temporary, partial line closure, despite a drop in sales of models produced there throughout the year
News
2 mins read
14 December 2020

Production has been largely halted at Jaguar Land Rover’s Castle Bromwich plant due to a “supplier issue related to Covid” causing delivery delays, the company has confirmed.

First revealed in the Guardian on Friday, production of Jaguar’s XE and XF saloons is said to have stopped during last week and is not planned to restart for a further two weeks. However, the newspaper reports that the line is still running for the F-Type sports car. 

Jaguar Land Rover (JLR) has insisted that the disruption is not a result of reported congestion at England’s ports – an issue that caused Honda to halt production at its Swindon plant last week. That factory, where the Civic is produced, is due to restart assembly today. 

The port congestion is claimed to be a mixture of an increased number of imports of products for consumers at Christmas and some companies electing to stockpile to prevent potential disruption in a no-deal Brexit scenario. 

Castle Bromwich was closed along with most of the UK's manufacturing output during the first coronavirus lockdown in March. However, it was one of the last factories to resume production, not starting again until August. 

The Jaguar brand has been hit hard throughout 2020 from what was already relatively low sales of its core models, the XE and XF. Between April and September, 46,134 models were registered by the brand – a fall of 40% on the same period in 2019. 

READ MORE:

Jaguar Land Rover's design team shuffle may signal bigger changes

Jaguar announces new strategy to grow XE and XF sales

Inside the industry: Covid provides fresh start for Jaguar Land Rover

Advertisement
Advertisement

Find an Autocar review

Join the debate

Comments
4
Add a comment…
Just Saying 14 December 2020

One would have thought they'd have at least thrown some wheels and doors on the car shown before stopping! 

Rtfazeberdee 14 December 2020
Oh dear... trouble at the ports - Honda has the same issue, JIT manufacturing already falling apart - wonder what it'll be like next year.
xxxx 14 December 2020

Honda sales are so poor in europe its a good time to use an excuse like this

Lanehogger 14 December 2020
xxxx wrote:

Honda sales are so poor in europe its a good time to use an excuse like this

I do wonder how long Honda will last in the UK as out of their now small line-up of models, only the Civic and CRV seem to sell well(ish) but probably not in the numbers Honda would ike.

Find an Autocar car review