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Manufacturing

Plymouth's Mars Wrigley HQ sees profits fall by £73m during Covid-hit year

Confectionery giant saw impulse sales hammered during lockdown but still made a £55m surplus in 2020

The Mars Wrigley factory in Estover, Plymouth, is the American-owned firm's º£½ÇÊÓÆµ HQ(Image: Google)

The Plymouth-headquartered maker of some of the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ’s most popular confectionery saw profits slide by £73m due to the Covid pandemic, it can be revealed.

Newly published financial statements for Mars Wrigley Confectionery º£½ÇÊÓÆµ Ltd show the company made a profit of £55m in 2020.

But this was down from the £128m profit it made the year before sales were disrupted by the coronavirus pandemic, with retail outlets closed and impulse purchasers confined to home, and fell by £152m.

The vast Mars Wrigley Plymouth factory is the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ headquarters of the American-owned firm. More than 530 employees work at a site where every day more than four million packets of chewing gum are manufactured.

Production was maintained at the Estover plant in 2020, Mars Wrigley’s only º£½ÇÊÓÆµ factory, during the pandemic but it temperature-tested workers at the start of shifts and took other safety precautions.

The firm said it would not pay a dividend to its shareholders due to the Covid-related slump.

A strategic report included with the accounts said that the 2020 Covid-19 outbreak in the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ caused “significant financial market downturn and social dislocation”.

It said the pandemic, and its lockdowns, had an adverse effect on sales “with the impact of lockdown resulting in a drop in footfall in key outlets and a drip in consumer impulse purchases across a range of categories”.