Airbus warns it may need to stockpile parts against Brexit

Airbus Airbus loading wingsAirbus
Wings for the A400M military transport aircraft being delivered - Airbus UK builds wings at Filton near Bristol and in Broughton North Wales

Airbus, one of the UK's biggest manufacturing employers, has warned it may have to stockpile parts to operate smoothly once the UK leaves the EU.

Katherine Bennett, senior vice-president for Airbus UK, told the BBC it would have to decide very soon about "pressing the button" on stockpiling.

"We spend £5bn a year on the UK supply chain... it is really important the parts don't get held up in warehouses."

Ms Bennett said the firm was in discussions with government.

She told the BBC's Today programme that the firm operated a "just in time" supply chain, which meant that even a three-hour delay at Dover, for example, would be "a critical issue".

"We need conditions right for us, we just don't need these burdens... which may make Airbus think differently [about its base]," she warned.

Airbus builds its planes in four "home" countries across Europe. In the UK, it builds the wings for the A400M military planes at Filton, near Bristol, and builds wings for the other Airbus planes at Broughton in North Wales.

Separately, the company issued a statement on Monday saying it would meet European works council members later in the week to talk about the possible impact on jobs from a falling production rates of the A380 and A400M planes.

There have been recent press reports of plans for thousands of job cuts at the company.

Airbus said it had a policy of "first addressing workforce issues with its social partners" before any public disclosure.

In its statement, the company said it "deeply regrets that the process on the current subject matter has been disturbed by leaks to the media, which resulted in excessive reporting about alleged job cuts in its four home countries".