Tuesday, February 7, 2012

A Mitsubishi Motors boss has offered to sell its Dutch factory for one euro, a day after the Japanese car-maker said it was halting production there.

As 1,000 workers blocked entrances to the plant, unions reportedly called a strike on Friday against the closure.

Mitsubishi offers Dutch car plant for one euro


Union leaders say shutting the plant would be a "disaster" for the southern Netherlands.

Mitsubishi has blamed the difficult operating environment in Europe for its decision.

The Nedcar plant in the south-eastern province of Limburg currently employs 1,500 workers, producing Colts and Outlanders.

Under Tuesday's offer, announced by Mitsubishi Motors President Osamu Masuko according to a spokesman, the plant would be sold for a euro "if the payroll of about 1,500 factory workers can be maintained".

The BBC's Netherlands correspondent Anna Holligan says that as things stand the factory is due to close down at the end of this year.

The workers decided to go on strike to show they were not prepared to accept the decision "like lambs to the slaughter", Dutch broadcaster Nos reported.

But it added that the unions wanted to find a suitable buyer for the plant.


It may be true that operating conditions are difficult but Mitsu has dated products and are not selling all that well. The real issue here is that socialism and unions stop the natural progression of creative destruction. When the employee becomes more important then the product, society suffers.

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