Skip to main content

Volvo CE is moving production of backhoe loaders and graders

Volvo CE has announced it is moving production of its backhoe loaders and motor graders to its Chinese SDLG operation. The move is being made as part of a larger reorganisation, intended to boost overall profitability. Cost-saving measures are being implemented by Volvo CE to address the profitability of certain products. And the firm is opting to discontinue product development and production of backhoe loaders and motor graders in Europe and Americas and transfer these operations to its Chinese company
November 13, 2014 Read time: 2 mins
Volvo CE will switch production of graders and backhoe loaders to its Chinese SDLG facility
359 Volvo CE has announced it is moving production of its backhoe loaders and motor graders to its Chinese SDLG operation. The move is being made as part of a larger reorganisation, intended to boost overall profitability.

Cost-saving measures are being implemented by Volvo CE to address the profitability of certain products. And the firm is opting to discontinue product development and production of backhoe loaders and motor graders in Europe and Americas and transfer these operations to its Chinese company 5316 SDLG. Combined with other changes, this will result in a workforce reduction of about 1,000 employees, of whom the majority are in Poland, the US and Brazil.

The current product lines of advanced Volvo-branded backhoe loaders and graders have addressed a relatively small premium segment of the market. SDLG-branded backhoe loaders and motor graders will better serve customer demands in the large and growing value segment of the market.

Currently, motor graders are built at Volvo CE’s production sites in Shippensburg, US, and Pederneiras, Brazil, while backhoe loaders are manufactured in Pederneiras, Brazil, and Wroclaw, Poland. Ceasing European production of backhoe loaders will result in the closure of Volvo CE’s operations in Wroclaw.

The measures within Volvo CE are a part of the series of new activities within the increased scope of the Group’s Strategic Program 2013-2015, which was published in conjunction with the report on the third quarter 2014. Combined, these activities are expected to reduce the Group's structural costs by US$472 million. Together with ongoing activities, the ambition in the Strategic Program is to reduce the Group’s structural costs by $1.35 billion compared to 2012 and that all activities are implemented by the end of 2015 with a full-year savings-effect in 2016. For further information, refer to the Volvo Group’s report on the third quarter 2014.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Metso looks to develop its international profile following its recent demerger
    March 12, 2014
    Metso CEO and president Matti Kähkönen explained how the company is evolving - Mike Woof reports Finnish crushing and screening specialist Metso is looking to expand its worldwide operations following the recent demerger of the group. CEO and president Matti Kähkönen said that Metso has been a multi-industry business for the last 14 years. The firm’s biggest divisions have been the joint construction and mining division and the pulp and paper business, with its automation sector being the smallest of the
  • Deciding whether to buy new or used equipment
    May 20, 2015
    Customers can face the choice of buying used or new equipment – Dan Gilkes writes. The decision to buy either new or used equipment is almost as old as the construction plant market itself. However some of the reasons for choosing between the two might well be changing, to meet new demands from customers across the world and to cope with a changing supply base. Ever more stringent emissions legislation in Europe, the US and Japan, rapidly developing emerging markets that want the productivity of the latest
  • Deutz announces results for 2015
    March 17, 2016
    German engine manufacturer Deutz has today announced its financial results for 2015. New orders amounted to €1.2259 billion, down by 11.1% on the prior-year figure of €1.379 billion. In the service business, new orders were up by 7.2% however, although other segments reported a decrease in new orders compared with 2014.
  • JCB’s diamond deal for 1,000 backhoes
    April 12, 2013
    JCB has won a massive order for over 1,000 of its backhoe loaders in a deal which is designed to transform the rural economy of Brazil. Brazil's Ministry of Agrarian Development has signed a tender for the JCB 3C backhoes worth more than £40 million (US$60 million), as the company marks 60 years of backhoe loader production. The machines will be delivered throughout 2013 and put straight to work improving rural roads to ensure food produced for sale gets to market much quicker. The machines will be man