Vauxhall
built over 60,000 vans in the UK last year, making it Britain’s leading van
maker for the 14th year running, according to SMMT figures.
Driven by UK Vivaro (shown below) sales of over 28,000, Vauxhall manufactured 60,280 vans at its plant in Luton, Bedfordshire.
Driven by UK Vivaro (shown below) sales of over 28,000, Vauxhall manufactured 60,280 vans at its plant in Luton, Bedfordshire.
The offer of four years’
zero per cent APR finance, four years’ free servicing, a four year warranty and
four years’ AA cover, has proved popular with retail customers where Vauxhall
was number one in this segment.
Meanwhile, Vauxhall also
built over 90,000 Astras at its manufacturing plant in Ellesmere Port,
Cheshire. The much-lauded, all-new seventh-generation model is available in
showrooms now.
“We are delighted to be
the UK’s leading van manufacturer for the 14th year running,” said
Rory Harvey, Vauxhall’s chairman and managing director. “The Luton-built Vivaro
is the lynchpin of our award-winning van range and we are very proud of our 113
year heritage of building vehicles in Britain.”
Vauxhall’s all-new
Vivaro, launched in 2014, and secured 1,500 jobs at the UK’s only dedicated
light commercial vehicle plant after workers won a ten-year contract and a £185
million investment.
The Luton plant beat
world class competition from across Europe to build the new van.
Rival Ford Motor Company shuttered
its Transit van plant in Southampton 2013 making Vauxhall’s Luton facility the
sole flag bearer for UK van manufacturing, on a site where over eight million
vehicles have been built since 1905. The factory is a major exporter with 52
per cent of production destined for European markets.
Supplier firms across the
country also benefit from £600 million of business over the life cycle of the
second-generation Vivaro with 40 per cent of content sourced locally from UK
suppliers, up from 24 per cent for the previous van
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