JLR (Jaguar Land Rover) is in discussions with Chery centred around producing the Chinese automaker’s vehicles at one of its plants in the UK.

According to the Financial Times, the two firms are in the early discussions, which are being facilitated by the British government. Members of the government, including Prime Minister Keir Starmer, are currently in China for a series of wide-ranging trade negotiations.

The UK government has a set a target for the local auto industry to produce 1.3 million cars per year by 2035. The Society of Motor Manufacturers and Traders estimates manufacturers in the UK made just 738,000 cars last year.

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There’s no guarantee talks between Chery and JLR will result in a deal, with unnamed sources previously telling the business newspaper the UK’s high energy and labour costs are potential sticking points.

Chery has been busy expanding its manufacturing footprint outside of China. In 2024 it bought a factory in Barcelona that closed down by Nissan three years earlier. Last week the Chinese automaker signed a deal to buy Nissan’s plant in South Africa.

In 2024 the EU imposed additional tariffs of up to 35 per cent on Chinese made EVs citing unfair subsidies being handed out by Beijing. The UK declined to follow suit, with the trade minister stating reasoning there were no complaints lodged by local manufacturers with the Trade Remedies Authority.