supply chain resilience

Articles tagged “supply chain resilience

2 articles found

Beyond the Border: The UK Auto Industry''s Strategic Gambit Against EU ''Made in Europe'' Rules
Power Energy

Beyond the Border: The UK Auto Industry''s Strategic Gambit Against EU ''Made in Europe'' Rules

The UK automotive industry is actively lobbying the EU for amendments to its proposed 'Made in Europe' regulatory agenda, warning of significant risks to cross-Channel trade and global competitiveness. This article moves beyond the surface-level trade dispute to analyze the deeper strategic calculus at play. It examines how the UK's pushback is less about protectionism and more a defensive maneuver to preserve its role in complex, pan-European supply chains. We explore the hidden economic logic of regulatory alignment versus divergence, the long-term implications for battery and EV component sourcing, and why this negotiation is a critical stress test for the post-Brexit economic relationship. The analysis positions the industry's requested changes as a bid to maintain its integrated, just-in-time manufacturing model against a rising tide of continental economic sovereignty.

Beyond the Battlefield: Why Europe''s Defense Industry is Turning to the EIB for Energy Security
Power Energy

Beyond the Battlefield: Why Europe''s Defense Industry is Turning to the EIB for Energy Security

European defense contractors are seeking support from the European Investment Bank (EIB) to navigate the ongoing energy crisis, revealing a critical vulnerability at the intersection of national security and industrial policy. This move signals more than a short-term operational challenge; it highlights a systemic dependency where the production of military assets is threatened by volatile energy markets. The article explores the strategic implications of this dependency, questioning the resilience of Europe's defense industrial base and examining whether the EIB's involvement marks a new phase of 'securitized' industrial policy. We analyze the long-term risks to supply chains, the potential redefinition of the EIB's mandate, and what this means for European strategic autonomy in an era of geopolitical competition.