BERLIN (AP) — Volkswagen said significant cost cuts are urgently needed as it reported a steep decline in third-quarter earnings on Wednesday and faced employee representatives angry at the possibility of the automaker’s first plant closures in Germany.

The company reported net profit of 1.58 billion euros ($1.7 billion) for the July-September period, a 64% decline from the 4.35 billion euros it earned a year earlier. Revenue was only marginally lower, slipping 0.5% to 78.49 billion euros.

The figures came two days after the head of Volkswagen’s works council said management had informed employee representatives that it wants to close at least three plants in Germany. The company hasn’t publicly detailed its plans.

Volkswagen said in early September that auto industry headwinds mean it can’t rule out plant closures in its home country, and must drop a job protection pledge in force since 1994 that would have barred layoffs through 2029.

It cited factors including new competitors entering European markets and Germany’s deteriorating position as a manufacturing location. European automakers are facing increased competition from inexpensive Chinese electric cars.

The latest results “demonstrate the urgent need for action in a volatile environment characterized by intense competition,” chief financial officer Arno Antlitz said. “This is why we are facing important and painful decisions that we need to make together and to bear together.”

“We’ve not forgotten how to build great cars, but the costs — specifically in our German operations and factories — are far from being competitive,” Antlitz said. “This is why things cannot continue as they are now.”

Citing the confidentiality of talks with employee representatives, he said he wouldn’t comment specifically on plans or “speculations.”

Also on Wednesday, Volkswagen was holding a second round of talks at its Wolfsburg headquarters with union and employee representatives.

The head of the employee council, Daniela Cavallo, said workers want to see a “comprehensive plan for the future,” which needs to involve more than labor and plant costs.

“We expect today that the company at least declare its readiness to enter a negotiating process with us that has the aim of developing alternatives to plant closures and layoffs,” said Thorsten Gröger, the regional leader of the IG Metall industrial union. That, he added, is “the precondition for us to be able to continue this negotiating process.”

Otherwise, he noted that a no-strike obligation under the last wage deal with Volkswagen expires Dec. 1.

Volkswagen has some 120,000 employees in Germany, where it has 10 plants — six of them in the northern state of Lower Saxony, including Wolfsburg.

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