FILE PHOTO: The Ford logo at the New York Auto Show in the Manhattan borough of New York City, New York, U.S., March 29, 2018. REUTERS/Shannon Stapleton/File Photo
BORDEAUX, France (Reuters) – Ford (F.N) will end production at its Blanquefort gearbox plant in southwestern France by late August next year after it turned down a Belgian firm’s offer to buy the factory, the U.S. carmaker said on Thursday.
The French government had this autumn expressed optimism that the plant and its 850 employees would be saved, but Ford said it had told the plant’s works council that it had rejected the bid made by transmission supplier Punch Powerglide.
“Despite thorough and rigorous talks over the past nine months, and the best efforts of both sides, the plan put forward by the potential buyer presents significant risks,” Ford said in a statement to the works council.
“We do not believe that the prospective buyer’s plans offer the level of security or protection, or limit the risk of possible future job losses, that we would like for the employees,” added the company.
The likely job losses will be a blow for President Emmanuel Macron, coming at a time of public rebellion over his reforms to liberalize the economy, including an easing of labor laws, and battles to haul down the country’s stubbornly high unemployment.
Finance Minister Bruno Le Maire in September had described Punch Powerglide as a “credible, solid buyer.”
Reporting by Claude Canellas; Writing by Richard Lough; Editing by Sudip Kar-Gupta and Alexandra Hudson