077 First Wash
Calum Melrose posted a photo:
First soap wash. 428 had a little grime on her from sitting in shed 92 over the winter. Before the De-regulation event next Sunday it was only right she had a wash.


Calum Melrose posted a photo:
First soap wash. 428 had a little grime on her from sitting in shed 92 over the winter. Before the De-regulation event next Sunday it was only right she had a wash.



Germanyβs industrial decline is taking a painful toll on communities that have long relied on local manufacturing titans for jobs, prosperity and a sense of a secure future.

Among the places affected by the downturn is Ludwigshafen, a company town of chemical giant BASF, which has shed thousands of jobs while shifting its focus to China.
βThe mood is obviously not good,β Sinischa Horvat, chairman of BASFβs works council, which represents staff interests, told AFP during a visit to the city of about 175,000 people.
βThe entire market is currently so weak. When you watch the news, you hardly hear any positive messages.β
BASF is among Germanyβs manufacturing heavyweights in sectors ranging from autos to steel and factory equipment that have been cutting back in their domestic markets.
They are battling surging energy costs, fierce competition from China, and weak demand at a time when Europeβs biggest economy is mired in a long stagnation.
Some 2,500 jobs have been axed since 2022 in Ludwigshafen, which is dominated by sprawling chemical plants that stretch along the river Rhine, and more cuts are set to come.
A recent decision to sell off thousands of company-owned apartments, many occupied by current and former workers, has added to unease.
βThe sale of these apartments sends a signal to the city and to the people who live here and, in some cases, work at BASF β BASF is scaling back its operations,β Patrick Thiel, who lives in one of the apartments and works at the firm, told AFP.
βThere is growing concern that this wonβt stop at the apartments but will also affect the main plant,β added the 29-year-old, who also ran as a candidate in recent local polls for far-left party Die Linke.

Horvat said having BASF staff in the properties helped created a βsymbiosisβ between company and community.
βThis has fostered an understanding of chemistry and shaped the relationship with BASF in the city,β he said.
BASF β a supplier of base inputs to the agricultural, automotive and pharmaceutical sectors β says the proceeds will go to bolstering its core businesses, but acknowledged that the sale had βraised uncertaintiesβ.
A company spokeswoman however insisted that it would handle the sale responsibly, adding: βNo one has to fear losing their home.β
βWe will continue to see ourselves as an integral part of the local community in the future,β she said.
Underlining its commitment to Ludwigshafen, where the group has over 30,000 employees β around a third of its global workforce β Β BASF has agreed to hold off on compulsory redundancies there until at least 2028 and continue investing.
But as it cuts back at home, the worldβs biggest chemical firm is investing heavily overseas, last month inaugurating a vast 8.7 billion euro (US$10 billion) complex in China, its biggest ever single investment project.

It insists that building up its presence in China, the worldβs biggest chemical market, is crucial.
BASF is far from the only German company suffering.
Last year industrial companies cut 124,000 jobs, around double the figure in 2024, with hefty losses in particular found in the struggling auto sector, a study by consultancy EY showed.
Germanyβs manufacturing sector shrunk to a share of 19.5 percent of the countryβs economy in 2025, according to official figures β its lowest level for many years.
βThe loss of industrial jobs in Germany has accelerated in the past two years,β Marcel Fratzscher, president of the DIW economic institute, told AFP.
βCompanies that used to be the pride of Germany are suffering.β
Areas that have already suffered industrial job losses see greater social problems and offer fertile ground for fringe parties, such as the far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD), to pick up support, experts warn.
Still, Fratzscher said that Germany had undergone economic upheavals before, and urged politicians and companies to try to ensure the economy emerges stronger.
The current economic transformation should be seen βas an opportunity to move into sectors that have better margins, better jobs,β he said.
βThe biggest mistake we can make is to try to cement the status quo, to keep all companies exactly the same. That would lead to a much bigger deindustrialisation.β