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British carmakers seek clarity on ‘Made in EU’ rule as trade risks grow

By Thomson Reuters Apr 15, 2026 | 5:11 PM

By Julia Payne

BRUSSELS, April 16 (Reuters) – The UK’s automotive industry group SMMT said on Thursday carmakers need clarity now on whether Britain will count as ‘Made in EU’ in ​the European Commission’s Industrial Accelerator Act (IAA) policy as the ‌ambiguity risks delaying investments.

The trade uncertainty comes at a time when both Britain and the EU face stiff competition from cheap Chinese electric vehicles.

“The objective was to bolster the competitiveness of European industry vis-a-vis the increasing challenge coming ‌from ​further afield, low-cost countries. We are not ⁠a low-cost country. The ⁠intention of this regulation was not to hit the EU-UK trade,” SMMT chief executive Michael Hawes told reporters.

The IAA sets low-carbon and ‘Made in EU’ requirements for public procurement of, or subsidies ​for, making aluminium, cement, steel, renewable energy and green tech.

Under the proposal, countries with which the EU has trade agreements would ⁠be included as ‘Made in EU’ with ⁠any exclusions to be published once the IAA ​is adopted, which could take at least a year.

However, Hawes said ​the car industry needs a political statement on Britain sooner – ‌ideally ahead of an EU-UK summit due to take place in June or July. An IAA annex specific to automakers would require vehicles to be assembled in the EU, which could exclude ⁠British automakers.

SMMT said the annual value of EU-Britain automotive trade was about 80 billion euros ($94.34 billion) and the two sides remain each other’s biggest ⁠passenger car markets. ‌Britain is also the EU’s biggest buyer of ⁠auto components, SMMT said, citing UN data said.

“So ​for ‌a couple of years unless there is a ​clear indication ⁠from the outset … it casts a cloud over the UK automotive industry. It’s harder to put UK investment on a boardroom agenda if you can’t cost the future. We’re trying to get a clear political statement now,” Hawes said.

($1 = 0.8480 euros)

(Reporting by Julia Payne; Editing ​by Aurora Ellis)