Ineos Automotive is preparing to trim its global workforce, with “several hundred” head-office roles set to go as the carmaker tries to steady itself under the weight of rising debts. The company, founded and owned by billionaire industrialist Jim Ratcliffe, said the cuts will span multiple regions, including the UK and parts of Europe.
While the company did not disclose exact figures, the move affects a sizeable chunk of its 1,700 employees and marks one of the most significant shake-ups since the brand entered the automotive industry.
Hambach plant spared for now
Despite the scale of the decision, the company’s manufacturing hub in Hambach, France, is expected to remain untouched. The plant is responsible for building the Grenadier, Ineos’s rugged off-roader designed as a spiritual successor to the classic Land Rover Defender.
The Grenadier, however, hasn’t enjoyed the smoothest ride. Earlier this year, more than 7,000 units were recalled in the US because of door-related faults. Add to that the new US tariffs on imported cars introduced under Donald Trump’s administration, and the company suddenly finds its biggest market becoming its most expensive one.
Debt keeps climbing
The restructuring comes against a wider backdrop of financial strain across Ratcliffe’s broader empire. Ineos Group, the chemicals powerhouse at the core of his portfolio, has been flagged by major credit rating agencies for taking on unhealthy levels of debt.
Fitch Ratings and Moody’s noted that Ineos’s debt load had already risen to five or six times its annual earnings earlier this year. Fitch now estimates that figure has climbed to eight times, pushing the group close to €12 billion in total debt. Debt investors, unsurprisingly, have grown uneasy.
Closing plants, rising costs, and Europe’s energy problem
Part of the squeeze comes from Europe’s energy landscape. Ineos recently shut two chemical plants in Germany and announced plans to trim 20% of jobs at its East Yorkshire facility. It cited soaring energy prices and cheaper imports from China as key factors.
Company leadership hasn’t held back in its criticism of European policy, arguing that strict environmental rules are driving up operating costs and undermining the region’s industrial competitiveness. Ineos is now racing to file anti-dumping cases to block low-cost chemicals from flooding the market.
Ratcliffe’s expansion spree begins to bite
Jim Ratcliffe, worth an estimated £17 billion, built much of his empire on aggressive acquisitions funded by debt. That strategy propelled Ineos to become one of the world’s biggest chemical groups, but recent forays beyond the core business have proved more turbulent.
His ventures into fashion, sport, and automotive, from acquiring Belstaff to buying a stake in Manchester United, have stretched the group’s financial bandwidth. Manchester United alone has posted losses of around £300 million over three years.
With Ineos Automotive still struggling to find a stable footing and the chemicals business under pressure, the job cuts mark a moment of reckoning. The company insists the restructuring will bring “efficiency” and a leaner organisation. The wider group, though, faces a tougher question: can Ratcliffe’s empire keep growing when the debt mountain beneath it is starting to shift?




