Business

Less than 2 years after Charlotte expansion, UK manufacturer details layoff plans

Electric bus and van maker Arrival has detailed plans to lay off 35 employees in Charlotte, the company confirmed Thursday.
Electric bus and van maker Arrival has detailed plans to lay off 35 employees in Charlotte, the company confirmed Thursday. Courtesy of the city of Charlotte

Electric vehicle maker Arrival is laying off several dozen workers in Charlotte.

They layoffs are part of company-wide restructuring, Arrival spokeswoman Rana Khatun told The Charlotte Observer in a statement Thursday. Layoffs are for 35 people, Khatun said, bringing the total number of Arrival employees in the city down to 60.

Khatun did not specify when the layoffs would take effect in Charlotte.

Arrival said in a news release last month that a “challenging economic environment” could result in cutting up to 30% of its global workforce, among other changes. In its second quarter earnings presentation, officials cited supply chain issues and rising costs as economic headwinds.

Founded in 2015, Arrival manufactures electric buses and vans. The London-based company had announced it was expanding to the Charlotte area in 2020, when it also picked the city for its North American headquarters.

In March 2021, the company announced another local expansion with plans for a microfactory in West Charlotte, ultimately creating 250 jobs.

And last December, Arrival announced its third location here, a battery module production facility off Yorkmont Road, with plans to add 150 more jobs.

At the time, it meant that when the expansion was complete in all four locations, Arrival would have more than 800 employees in the region.

Arrival is still committed to launching and producing its vehicles in the area, according to Khatun. “We do also want to reiterate that the US and Charlotte remain a key market to us,” she said.

This story was originally published August 11, 2022 at 4:00 PM.

Hannah Lang
The Charlotte Observer
Hannah Lang covered banking, finance and economic equity for The Charlotte Observer from 2021 to 2023. Her work has appeared in The Wall Street Journal, the Triangle Business Journal and the Greensboro News & Record. She studied business journalism at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and grew up in the same town as her alma mater.
Get unlimited digital access
#ReadLocal

Try 1 month for $1

CLAIM OFFER