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Coca-Cola to Cut 500 Jobs in Germany as Five Plants Close
Coca-Cola Europacific Partners (CCEP), which manages Coca-Cola’s bottling, distribution, and sales in Germany, announced on Wednesday that it will close five logistics and production sites in the country, resulting in the loss of approximately 500 jobs over the next year. The closures will impact plants in Neumünster, Bielefeld, Berlin-Hohenschönhausen, Memmingen, and Cologne.
CCEP currently operates 14 production facilities and 27 locations across Germany, employing around 6,500 people. The decision to shut down these sites comes as part of the company’s strategy to become more cost-efficient and adapt to changing market conditions and logistics demands in the beverage industry.
“We are aware that the planned changes are very painful for the employees affected. It is therefore all the more important for us to implement all intended changes in a socially responsible and transparent manner,” said Tilmann Rothhammer, a spokesperson for CCEP, as reported by Spiegel. The company plans to relocate 207 of the affected employees to other facilities and create 78 new jobs as part of the restructuring process.
The Cologne facility, which employs around 600 people, is set to cease production by March 31, 2025. The plant, the smallest of CCEP’s West German operations, faces limited prospects for growth or expansion, making its closure inevitable.
This move by CCEP reflects broader changes in the global beverage sector. The industry is increasingly shifting from direct deliveries from individual logistics sites to centralized warehouse delivery models, leading companies to consolidate locations and optimize their facilities for greater efficiency.
In addition to the closures, CCEP is also investing in sustainability initiatives, including its recent partnership with the climate tech start-up Pipeline Organics. The company plans to use wastewater to generate renewable energy for its production lines and lighting, as part of its broader effort to achieve 100% renewable electricity across all its markets by 2030.
“Renewable energy is critical to our decarbonization journey, and the prospect of generating it on-site using existing infrastructure is incredibly exciting,” said Nicola Tongue, associate director at CCEP. Pipeline Organics co-founder and CEO Arielle Torres added that their technology could help address challenges like volatile energy prices and inefficient distribution networks, providing clean, cost-effective energy solutions for the future.
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