Audio By Carbonatix
Airbus will axe 477 jobs in the UK as the plane maker scales back its space business and tries to trim costs.
More than 2,000 jobs - 5% of its workforce - will be lost globally by mid-2026.
Compulsory job cuts are not planned, the firm said, adding that "almost all of the positions affected" do not relate to specific projects or programmes.
The cuts come as the firm's profits fall even as its sales rise, with the plane maker admitting in July it was struggling with "bottlenecks" in its supply chain.
It told the BBC at the time it has "more demand than the ability to supply" and admitted it was falling behind on orders.
The company said on Wednesday evening it wanted to reduce its "fixed cost base" and that it "will work with its social partners to limit the impact by utilising all available social measures".
The space arm of its business will take the brunt of cuts, with 1,128 jobs to go from that department.
A further 618 jobs will be cut from its headquarters, 250 from its air power department, and 47 from its connected intelligence department.
The job cuts will also be spread out geographically, with the bulk occurring in Western Europe:
- Germany - 689
- France - 540
- United Kingdom - 477
- Spain - 303
- Rest of world - 34
The job cuts come as Airbus' profit fell 22% to £1.8bn even as sales rose 7% to £44.5bn in its most recent results, which cover the nine months to 30th October.
Its thin profit margins mean relatively small rises in costs can hurt profits.
This is not the first time in the last few years Airbus has had to cut back on staff.
In 2020, it announced 15,000 job cuts globally and 1,700 in the UK specifically as the pandemic grounded flights, hitting plane makers' and airlines' profits.
The Unite union criticised the decision at the time as "another act of industrial vandalism" against the UK aerospace sector.
Latest Stories
-
CICM backs BoG’s microfinance sector reform programme; New Year Debt Recovery School comes off January-February 2026
8 minutes -
GIPC Boss urges diaspora to invest remittances into productive ventures
15 minutes -
Cedi ends 2025 as 4th best performing currency in Africa
19 minutes -
Obaapa Fatimah Amoadu Foundation launches in Mankessim as 55 artisans graduate
1 hour -
Behold Thy Mother Foundation celebrates Christmas with aged mothers in Assin Manso
1 hour -
GHIMA reaffirms commitment to secured healthcare data
1 hour -
John Boadu pays courtesy call on former President Kufuor, seeks guidance on NPP revival
2 hours -
Emissions Levy had no impact on air pollution, research reveals
3 hours -
DSTV enhanced packages stay in force as subscriptions rise following price adjustments
3 hours -
Financial Stability Advisory Council holds final meeting for 2025
3 hours -
Education in Review: 2025 marks turning point as Mahama resets Ghana’s education sector
3 hours -
Nigeria AG orders fresh probe into alleged intimidation and assault of Sam Jonah’s River Park estate staff
3 hours -
Concerned Small Scale Miners commend GoldBod’s efforts in addressing gold smuggling
3 hours -
Haruna Mohammed claims Ghana Audit Service undermined
3 hours -
5 members of notorious robbery syndicate in Tema, Accra arrested
3 hours
