logo
Job loss fears as Airbus confirms deal for Spirit operations in Belfast

Job loss fears as Airbus confirms deal for Spirit operations in Belfast

The Guardian28-04-2025

Unions have said they have 'serious concerns' over the jobs of thousands of workers at a historic aerospace factory in Belfast, after they were left out of a takeover by Airbus.
Airbus, the world's biggest planemaker, said on Monday that it had agreed to buy parts of Spirit AeroSystems, including wing and fuselage production for the A220 small passenger jet in Belfast, that employ 1,500 workers. Even then, the fuselage production could still be sold on to another company if Spirit finds a buyer before the Airbus deal is completed.
The deal also leaves uncertainty over the fate of another 2,000 employees in Belfast who produce parts for companies other than Airbus. Those workers produce parts for a range of customers, including Bombardier, Honda Aircraft and Rolls-Royce, from one of the world's most historic aerospace operations.
Ownership of the Belfast site has been passed from the government to Bombardier and then to Spirit over the course of decades. Yet it still trades under the name of Short Brothers, a company that is the world's oldest aircraft manufacturer. That company now faces being carved up, which could leave Northern Ireland's biggest manufacturing employer at risk of job losses.
The carve-up of the factory stems from the $4.7bn (£3.5bn) deal last year by US manufacturer Boeing to take over Spirit in an effort to gain more control of its supply chain after a series of safety crises.
There was little prospect of Boeing continuing to supply parts for Airbus, its bitter rival. Airbus will also take control of work for its planes at Kinston in North Carolina, Wichita in Kansas, Saint-Nazaire in France, Casablanca in Morocco and Prestwick in Scotland. Spirit will pay Airbus $439m for it to take on the various sites before the completion of the Boeing takeover.
However, it is unclear whether Boeing will be content to act as a supplier to other businesses from the Belfast factory. The factory is in a difficult financial situation. It reported a loss of $338m in 2023, and has made cumulative losses of more than $1.2bn since its last profit in 2016.
Unite and GMB, two unions representing workers at the plant, called for the Belfast site to be sold to a single buyer. Unite said the UK government should intervene.
Sharon Graham, the Unite general secretary, said: 'The government has huge leverage over the key players – billions in contracts and government grants go to these aircraft manufacturers. It cannot drop the ball and allow the collapse of Northern Ireland's strategic and world-class aerospace sector. Government needs to deliver for Northern Ireland.'
The GMB union said it had 'serious concerns over the future' of the non-Airbus work at Belfast.
Alan Perry, a senior organiser for GMB, said the Belfast operation should remain as 'one identity'.
Sign up to Business Today
Get set for the working day – we'll point you to all the business news and analysis you need every morning
after newsletter promotion
'GMB has engaged with Stormont ministers who agree a carve-up does not benefit the company or the wider Northern Ireland economy,' he said. 'This company, which has been here for more than 150 years, we will fight tooth and nail to protect and maintain jobs for future generations.'
Airbus said the deal would 'maintain stability across the supply chain' for its planes.
'These activities are critical to Airbus's production ramp-up and will be stabilised within the Airbus operating system,' a spokesperson said. 'Non-Airbus operations in Belfast will transfer to Boeing or may be divested to a third party by Spirit prior to closing.'
At Prestwick, the vast majority of the 1,200 employees will transfer to Airbus. However, Airbus also equivocated over the longer-term ownership of the site, which makes the edges of wings. Airbus said it will 'assess its long-term strategy for the site as part of ongoing industrial planning'.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

China, Mexico, EU, Japan, Canada urge Trump not to impose new airplane tariffs
China, Mexico, EU, Japan, Canada urge Trump not to impose new airplane tariffs

Reuters

time4 hours ago

  • Reuters

China, Mexico, EU, Japan, Canada urge Trump not to impose new airplane tariffs

WASHINGTON, June 10 (Reuters) - China, Mexico, the European Union, Japan, Canada and many airlines and aerospace companies worldwide urged the Trump administration not to impose new national security tariffs on imported commercial planes and parts, according to documents released Tuesday. Separately, U.S. planemaker Boeing (BA.N), opens new tab cited a recent trade deal announced in May with Britain that ensures tariff free treatment for airplanes and parts. "The United States should ensure duty-free treatment for commercial aircraft and their parts in any negotiated trade agreement, similar to its efforts with the UK," Boeing said in a filing with the U.S. Commerce Department made public Tuesday.

UK Government Confirms £14.2bn Investment to Deliver Sizewell C
UK Government Confirms £14.2bn Investment to Deliver Sizewell C

Business News Wales

time11 hours ago

  • Business News Wales

UK Government Confirms £14.2bn Investment to Deliver Sizewell C

Energy Secretary Ed Miliband has said the UK needs new nuclear to 'deliver a golden age of clean energy abundance' as the UK Government announced a £14.2 billion investment to build Sizewell C nuclear plant. Ten thousand jobs will be created , the UK Government said, including 1,500 apprenticeships. It added that the funding would also support thousands more jobs across the UK. The company has already signed £330 million in contracts with local companies and will boost supply chains across the UK with 70% of contracts predicted to go to 3,500 British suppliers, supporting new jobs in construction, welding, and hospitality. The equivalent of around six million homes will be powered with clean homegrown energy from Sizewell C. The announcement comes as the UK Government is set to confirm one of Europe's first Small Modular Reactor programmes. Taken together with Sizewell C, this delivers the biggest nuclear building programme in a generation, it said. Energy Secretary Ed Miliband said: 'We will not accept the status quo of failing to invest in the future and energy insecurity for our country. 'We need new nuclear to deliver a golden age of clean energy abundance, because that is the only way to protect family finances, take back control of our energy, and tackle the climate crisis. 'This is the Government's clean energy mission in action- investing in lower bills and good jobs for energy security.' The UK opened the world's first commercial nuclear power station in the 1950s, but no new nuclear plant has opened in the UK since 1995, with all of the existing fleet except Sizewell B likely to be phased out by the early 2030s. Great British Nuclear is expected to announce the outcome of its small modular reactor competition imminently, the first step towards the goal of driving down costs and unlocking private finance with a long-term ambition to bring forward one of the first SMR fleets in Europe. Small modular reactors are expected to power millions of homes with clean energy and help fuel power-hungry industries like AI data centres. The UK Government said it was also looking to provide a route for private sector-led advanced nuclear projects to be deployed in the UK, alongside investing £300 million in developing the world's first non-Russian supply of the advanced fuels needed to run them. Companies will be able to work with the UK Government to continue their development with potential investment from the National Wealth Fund. The UK Government is also making a record investment in R&D for fusion energy, investing over £2.5 billion over 5 years. This includes progressing the STEP programme (Spherical Tokamak for Energy Production), the world-leading fusion plant in Nottinghamshire, creating thousands of new jobs and with the potential to unlock limitless clean power.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store