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Manufacturing

Siemens Mobility looking to create 250 more jobs in Goole as it aims to widen rail village operations

Bogie and wheelset centre is now with planners as business case to relocate and expand current Lincoln facility is worked up

Wheels in motion: Rail Minister Huw Merriman at Siemens Mobility, where plans for a new bogie and wheelset centre were unveiled.

A total of 250 more jobs could be coming to Goole’s rail village as Siemens Mobility looks to further expand operations in the town.

Rail Minister Huw Merriman has praised the “endless opportunity” now emerging, having been briefed on the plans during his summer tour of º£½ÇÊÓÆµ infrastructure. He heard how the company is finalising proposals to bring additional train component assembly and refurbishment work to the sprawling site, with a multi-million pound 13,500 sq m bogie and wheelset centre at the fore.

An application has been lodged with East Riding of Yorkshire Council for the centre, dedicated to the structures that sit beneath the carriages. It would build on a recently opened components facility, as additional elements over and above the original plans. That could also be significantly expanded as a wider range of work is attracted, while bosses look to capitalise on freeport status and provide an international service.

Read more: First look at the Siemens Mobility trains set to be built in Goole

Mr Merriman visited on Friday, with wider proposals for a hotel and 1.2km test track highlighted. Explaining the latest move, project director Finbarr Dowling, - alongside Siemens Mobility joint chief executive Sambit Banerjee - told how the work on the bogies and wheelsets is currently done in a space-restrained 170-year-old factory 50 miles away. He said: “The business is currently in Lincoln and growing so fast, that we’re looking to lift it up and drop it here.

“It involves 250 jobs, with 150 existing and 100 new. Plans and the business case are still going through, but we’re looking to have it open by 2025/26.

Rail Minister Huw Merriman, second left, id shown the progress in the main assembly hall at Siemens Mobility's Goole plant, by, from left, joint chief executive Sambit Banerjee; site ditrector and general manager Mark Speed; commercial director Niraj Sondhi; advanced apprentice Charlie Dolling and project director Finbarr Dowling.

“We want to stay here for the next 50 years, we want to set something up that stands the test of time.”

The strategy is to have a mix of new build and service work for the rail industry, with a “blended workforce” able to move between, to maximise job creation and reduce agency need, while smoothing out peaks and troughs between orders. In a similar move, the components facility - opened by Levelling Up Secretary Michael Gove in April as the first operational element - was also transferred across from Leeds to allow for significant expansion. Initially employing 30, it is now at 60, and will be 80 by December.