Volkswagen Temporarily Cutting Production of European EVs

volkswagen temporarily cutting production of european evs

Volkswagen intends to temporarily limit production of the SEAT Cupra Born and its very own ID.3 EV in October. The company has cited market forces as the cause, noting that its Zwickau and Dresden plants in Germany would be throttled down for a couple of weeks.


According to Reuters, regional demand for both models has declined as Chinese EVs have started to become commonplace in Europe. Pricing has also become an issue due to sizable inflation and some scaling back of the EU’s electric vehicle incentives. However, it must be said that the ID.3 technically is a Chinese-made EV.


While most European allocations stem from Germany, examples from the Chinese market are the result of the joint partnership between Volkswagen Group and SAIC Motor and are assembled domestically.


Vehicle production will be scaled back from October 2nd through the 13th at Volkswagen's Zwickau plant (just in time for Oktoberfest) and from October 2nd to the 16th at the Dresden facility.


Reuters reported that the company declined to comment on the number of employees that will be affected. Earlier in the month, VW said that it would not extend the fixed-term contracts of 269 employees at its all-electric Zwickau plant — perhaps indicating that there is more going on here than meets the eye.


Meanwhile, demand seems to be increasing on the ID.4 manufactured in Chattanooga, Tennessee (in addition to the ID.3 plans located in Germany and China) seems to be improving. However, the relevant reporting often fails to mention how an uptick in model volume may be the result of a slow launch undermined by production issues.


It’s easy to claim something is enjoying a massive increase in sales when it’s a novel model starting from a modest production run.


In truth, Volkswagen’s EVs aren’t doing so well on the global stage. Both the ID.3 and ID.4 have undergone significant price cuts in China. For example, the ID.4 launched with a Chinese MSRP of 193,900 yuan (roughly $27,000 USD) in 2021. After repeat markdowns, it now costs just 145,900 yuan (about $20,000 USD) while the U.S. version retails somewhere around $39,000.


The ID.3 has been subjected to similar price cuts and now starts at around $16,500 (translated into USD) in China. However, examples sold in the United Kingdom are priced closer to $44,000 (likewise converted into USD).


This wouldn’t be an issue if Western consumers had an endless supply of money or if Chinese markets didn’t have so much cheap competition. Compared to other segments, EV volumes remain relatively small and tend to be focused upmarket where people can splurge on a luxurious local runabout. That’s not good news for the aforementioned Volkswagen products.


The company seems to have found itself in a bit of a pickle. But we cannot say how things will play out in the long term. Price cuts in China coincided with a 300-percent increase in regional sales for the ID.3 between June and July of 2023 and we’ve seen American ID.4 sales progress steadily as production improves.


Meanwhile, VW has continued experiencing shrinking volumes in Europe and China over the last several years. A complete disaster managed to be averted by the company managing to improve vehicle margins (something every automaker has been trying to do of late). But those days may be ending as even more customers are priced out of the new vehicle market. The synergies afforded by economies of scale tend to lose momentum as volumes decline and there are very few automakers that will be able to continue selling automobiles with exceptionally broad margins.


[Image: Volkswagen Group]

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via Autobuzz Today

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