Rolls-Royce tells UK staff EU membership is best for company

Chief executive says company would remain committed to the UK whatever the outcome

The chief executive of Britain’s Rolls-Royce has written to its UK staff to tell them the engineering company is better off in the EU.
The chief executive of Britain’s Rolls-Royce has written to its UK staff to tell them the engineering company is better off in the EU.

The chief executive of Britain’s Rolls-Royce has written to its UK staff to tell them the engineering company is better off in the EU, warning that Brexit could result in some decisions being put on hold.

"We have taken the public position that as a company Rolls-Royce believes our customers, suppliers and employees benefit from the UK's membership of the European Union and that it is in the company's interests to remain a member," chief executive Warren East said in the letter to the 23,000 staff employed in Britain.

If Britain votes to leave the EU on June 23, Rolls-Royce could put decisions like whether to invest in a new aero-engine testing facility at its Derby plant on hold, East told the BBC in an interview on Wednesday.

“We’re making investment decisions all the time about where to place different parts of our operation,” he said.

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“Uncertainty created by Brexit puts a lot of those decisions on hold and that pause is something that our U.S. competitors don’t have to cope with.”

Rolls-Royce, one of Britain’s best known engineering companies which makes engines for aeroplanes, ships and industrial use, is in the middle of a turnaround plan after a series of profit downgrades over the last two years.

In the letter, East also said that whatever the outcome, Rolls-Royce would remain committed to the UK.

Reuters