Plan for Siemens train factory could mean 700 new skilled jobs

Plan for Siemens train factory could mean 700 new skilled jobs

Plans for a new state-of-the-art train factory in East Yorkshire could mean a £200 million investment and 700 new skilled jobs, the engineering giant Siemens said.

The German firm says it has secured a site in Goole and plans to establish a major new plant to manufacture and commission trains in a move which “has the potential to have a tremendous impact on the Yorkshire economy and the North of England as a whole”.

The move would be Siemens’s second landmark investment in East Yorkshire following its £300 million wind turbine blade plant, which employs hundreds of people 30 miles east in Hull.

Impression of interior of planned new Siemens train factory in Goole (Siemens/PA)

And it said it expected around 1,700 indirect jobs to be created throughout the UK supply chain.

Juergen Maier, chief executive at Siemens UK, said: “We’ve said for some time that future success for Siemens in the rail industry would see us opening a rail manufacturing plant here and this announcement provides additional substance to those words.

“Having considered multiple locations in the UK, I’m delighted to confirm that we’ve identified a site in Goole for our new UK rail factory which not only has the potential scale we need for a facility of this size, but also ready access to the skilled people we’d need to build and operate the factory.

Mr Maier said: “This investment has the potential to have a tremendous impact on the Yorkshire economy and the North of England as a whole, ensuring that the benefits of infrastructure spending are spread widely and helping to ensure the ongoing development of the UK rail industry.”

Siemens built Class 700 train (Siemens/PA)

It said there are currently 450 Siemens-built trains in service and the company has eight purpose-built maintenance facilities in the UK.

Plans for the 67-acre site next the M62 in Goole include sidings and the potential for the development of a test track.

Transport secretary Chris Grayling said: “This exciting proposal by Siemens underlines the benefits of this Government’s £13bn investment into improving and modernising Northern transport, providing major firms with the fast, reliable connections required to recruit a skilled workforce and deliver cutting-edge innovation.”

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