Solihull staff return to Range Rover production line after JLR cyber-attack

1 month ago 162

Vanessa PearceWest Midlands

Jaguar Land Rover A female worker operates machinery at Jaguar Land Rover's factory in Wolverhampton. She has red hair which is tied back and has glasses perched on her head. She is wearing a dark top and red gloves. Jaguar Land Rover

Work has restarted in the Jaguar Land Rover Wolverhampton, Solihull and Halewood factories after the cyber-attack

Range Rover production lines in Solihull have resumed, according to car maker Jaguar Land Rover (JLR).

About 1,000 employees also started work in the car maker's Wolverhampton engine plant on Wednesday, it said, marking a "significant moment" on its journey back to full vehicle production.

The company revealed on Monday it had suffered a sharp drop in sales following a cyber-attack, adding it had been a "challenging quarter" as it also dealt with the impact of higher US tariffs.

There was a "strong sense of unity and momentum" as the company welcomed back staff, said global manufacturing director Luis Vara.

Jaguar Land Rover A worker on Jaguar Land Rover's production line. He is wearing dark clothesJaguar Land Rover

The company has revealed a sharp drop in sales over recent months

The company was back to doing "what it did best", he added, "building quality luxury vehicles for our customers".

Stamping operations in Castle Bromwich, West Midlands, and Halewood, in Merseyside, have also resumed, the company said.

"Wolverhampton is one of the first sites to restart production because it's where we build all of the engines for JLR vehicles ahead of vehicle production taking place," the company added.

The attack came at a crucial time for the company with the release of new 75-series number plates expected to trigger a surge in demand.

Between July and September, sales fell by 17.1% compared with the same period a year ago.

UK sales had dropped by a third, the company said.

JLR said this partly reflected the production freeze since the start of September.

Jaguar Land Rover An aerial image of Jaguar Land Rover's Wolverhampton factoryJaguar Land Rover

About 1,000 workers returned to the company's Wolverhampton factory on Wednesday

JLR has announced a programme to fast-track payments to its direct suppliers, some of which have laid off workers after their revenues dried up following the hack.

The company also vowed to pay back financing costs for those JLR suppliers who use the scheme during the restart phase.

Industry insiders have warned the resumption of production, while welcome, does not end the crisis being experienced by many smaller suppliers.


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