Partner Article
Tea firm has no mercy for Tyneside workforce
TWININGS has defended taking a £12m EU grant to help fund the opening of a tea-packing factory in Poland, despite hundreds of jobs being lost in the region.
The Twinings plant on North Tyneside, which employs 260, is to close, with Owner AB Foods planning to open a £27m site in Poland.
The European Commission has opened an investigation into whether this use of the funding breached EU rules, with critics arguing that the taxpayer-funded grant from the EU effectively meant the workers had paid for their own job losses.
However, AB Foods Chief Executive George Weston said that the decision to open the Poland site was made before the application for the grant.
He Said: “The days when it made sense to import tea to the UK to pack it there and send it to Australia are behind us and we have to have factories in the right places.”
“We don’t apologise for renewing our supply chain, it’s a global business.
“We are expanding our factory in China and building a new one in Poland, which will reduce tea miles and produce a business better equipped to supply the market.”
This was posted in Bdaily's Members' News section by Ruth Mitchell .
Enjoy the read? Get Bdaily delivered.
Sign up to receive our popular morning National email for free.
Staying relevant without losing equity
Businesses - play your part in festive success!
Building for change after a year of highs and lows
Give us certainty to accelerate electric drive
We must create a new pathway to growth
We must act now to provide a home for all
We need a longer-term focus on public money
A collaborative approach to skills development
A budget of shocks and surprises
University isn’t for everyone
A budget of ups and downs
Government budget 'must deliver firm foundations'