The electric vehicle revolution is rolling into the quiet lanes of the British luxury car industry, and some of its most iconic names are facing an uncomfortable question. Will the grand tourer, the soft-top convertible, the V12-engined behemoth – the very symbols of British engineering prowess – survive the shift to battery power? For the men and women who build them, the answer has immediate, real-world consequences.
Last week, Bentley announced it would delay its first fully electric car by a year, to 2026, citing “complexities” in the luxury EV market. The company, based in Crewe, employs over 4,000 people. Workers there know the stakes. When a luxury brand stumbles, it is not just shareholders who feel the pain. It is the skilled machinists, the upholsterers, the assembly line workers who have spent decades honing a craft.
I visited a supplier in the West Midlands last month, a small family firm that makes leather-trimmed steering wheels for several high-end marques. The owner, a Yorkshireman named Tom, told me his order book for 2030 is already half empty. “The big boys are hedging their bets. They don’t know if the customer wants a silent V8 or a whirring electric motor. We don’t know whether to tool up for new battery packs or keep the old ICE lines running.” That uncertainty is a luxury no worker can afford.
The problem is partly technological. Storing enough battery capacity to deliver the performance and range expected of a £200,000 car requires heavy, bulky packs. Weight is the enemy of handling. And range anxiety, for the buyer of a weekend toy, is a different beast to the daily commuter. A Rolls-Royce or a Aston Martin is not meant to be a soulless appliance.
But there is a deeper, more political issue. The government’s zero-emission vehicle mandate requires 22% of car sales to be electric by 2024, rising to 80% by 2030. Luxury brands exist on volume. They cannot cross-subsidise loss-making EVs with profitable petrol models in the same way mass-market giants can. For Bentley, JLR, and Aston Martin, every single car must be profitable.
So where does that leave the worker? In the short term, it means job security is tied to the health of the internal combustion engine. The Society of Motor Manufacturers and Traders warns that 30,000 jobs in the UK automotive supply chain are at risk from the transition, many in the high-value luxury sector. The government’s Automotive Transformation Fund offers grants, but the application process is a labyrinth. Small suppliers lack the finance to hire the consultants needed to navigate it.
I spoke to a union representative at a Rolls-Royce plant in Goodwood. “Our members are proud of what they build,” he said. “They are not Luddites. They understand the need to decarbonise. But they need a roadmap. They need retraining. They need certainty that their skills will still be valued in twenty years.” Right now, that certainty is as rare as a clutch of solid-silver Spirit of Ecstasy bonnet ornaments.
The luxury car industry has reinvented itself before. After the war, it lowered its sights from bespoke coachbuilding to more affordable models. In the 1970s, it weathered the oil crisis. But this transition is different. It is not just about adapting a product. It is about redefining what luxury means. Silence, instant torque, sustainable materials. These things are not alien to British engineering. But the pace of change is brutal.
For the wage earner, for the family in Crewe or Gaydon or Castle Bromwich, the next few years will be a test of whether the UK’s industrial strategy can protect not just the brands, but the people who make them. The red tape, the uncertain demand, the huge capital costs – these are not abstract boardroom worries. They are the stuff of sleepless nights, of decisions about whether to take on debt for a new CNC machine, of union battles over redundancy terms.
The sun might be setting on the traditional convertible. But we should not mourn the car. We should look to the worker. Their future is not a given. It will be decided by government grants, by corporate strategy, and by the willingness of the City to invest in long-term, low-volume manufacturing. History shows that when British industry is left to the market alone, the workers suffer. The electric reckoning is here. We must ensure it is a fair one.








