British commercial vehicle (CV) manufacturing fell -10.0% in
August, following July's rise, as 6,044 units rolled out of UK
factories, according to new figures published today by the
Society of Motor Manufacturers and Traders (SMMT).
However, due to August being a low output month due to the
traditional ‘summer shutdown', this was equivalent to just 673
fewer units with year to date volumes still 8.8% up on 2019's
pre-pandemic output.1
Exports continued to dominate output, with a very marginal
decline of just -0.2%, a year on year loss of just seven
vehicles.2 More than half of output (59.3%)
was produced for overseas markets, with the EU receiving the
lion's share (97.2%). Production for the UK, meanwhile, declined
by -21.3% to 2,457 units.
In the year to date, UK CV plants have produced 78,805 units, a
rise of 5.8% on 2023 and the best performance in 14 years despite
supply chain disruptions throughout the
year.3 Volumes are also up a staggering 72.3% on
2019 levels – driven by exports,4 up 12.0%, with
52,389 units shipped overseas. Output for the domestic market,
however, fell -4.7% to 26,416 units.
Mike Hawes, SMMT Chief Executive, said, “Demand
for British-built commercial vehicles remains strong and while
August output was down, this aligns with expectations as
manufacturers adjust to new models and market demand.
Sustaining future success depends on ensuring the UK retains
its competitiveness, with vibrant markets at home and globally
for the increasingly zero emission vans, trucks, buses and taxis
our plants produce.”
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Notes for Editors
SMMT data is subject to periodical revision if additional
information becomes available.
1 CV production, August 2019: 5,556 units
2 CV exports, August 2023: 3,594 units
3 CV production, Jan - Aug 2023: 6,717 units; CV
production, Jan - Aug 2010: 80,188 units
4 CV production, Jan – Aug 2019: 45,740 units
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