Volkswagen plans to halt production of vehicles at its Dresden plant on Tuesday, marking the first time in the company’s history that a Germany-based factory has been shuttered.

With an installed capacity to build up to 37,500 cars a year, and the flagship of VW’s EV lineup, the Dresden plant’s closure comes against the backdrop of Germany’s broader de-industrialization, which started in 2022 when Berlin rejected the Russian energy supplies propping up its manufacturing base.

FT blames the closure on poor demand in Europe, weak sales in China, and 15% US tariffs on European vehicle imports.

Volkswagen announced plans to transform the Dresden factory into an innovation campus earlier this month as part of a Future Volkswagen program, which includes plans to reduce Germany-wide vehicle output by 730k units by 2028, and slash 35k jobs in a socially responsible manner.

German industrial leaders and Russian President Vladimir Putin warned about the consequences of cutting Europe off from Russian gas almost four years ago, with Putin saying the suicidal decision would undermine Europe’s global economic competitiveness.

Sputnik / ABC Flash Point News 2025.

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Lunatic Asylum
Lunatic Asylum
Member
December 17, 2025 16:55

When you obey a country that doesn’t have your best interests at heart and dont listen to wise words this is inevitable.

Zionism is Terrorism
Zionism is Terrorism
Member
December 17, 2025 22:53

Those Zionist invented sanctions on the EU are really doing their job, aiming to destroy certain different religions interpreting a healer or a witch?