Andrew Burton, Getty Images
Industryweek 12990 021017 Apple Timcook Brexit Andrewburton
Industryweek 12990 021017 Apple Timcook Brexit Andrewburton
Industryweek 12990 021017 Apple Timcook Brexit Andrewburton
Industryweek 12990 021017 Apple Timcook Brexit Andrewburton
Industryweek 12990 021017 Apple Timcook Brexit Andrewburton

Apple CEO Cook: Britain Will Be ‘Just Fine’ Post-Brexit

Feb. 10, 2017
“We’re a big believer in the United Kingdom. The UK will be just fine. We are very optimistic about the UK’s future, and we are all in.”

LONDON — Apple chief executive Tim Cook has some encouraging words for Great Britain as it prepares to leave the European Union.

“We’re a big believer in the UK,” Cook said after visiting a coding class at a London primary school. “The UK will be just fine. “We are very optimistic about the UK’s future, and we are all in.”

Cook made the comments to ITV television after meeting Prime Minister Theresa May and London Mayor Sadiq Khan during a visit to Britain. He did, however, tell reporters that he expected “bumps in the road” on the path to Brexit.

Britain voted to leave the European Union in a referendum in June last year and Prime Minister Theresa May is preparing to kickstart the departure process by the end of March.

Apple announced in September that it would create a London headquarters in the iconic and long-abandoned Battersea Power Station on the banks of the River Thames. Around 1,400 staff from eight existing offices in London will relocate to the renovated landmark, whose distinctive chimneys have towered over the southern riverbank since the 1930s. There will be enough space there for 3,000 staff.

“We’re double-downing on a huge headquarters in the Battersea area ... and we’re leaving significant space there to expand,” Cook said in the interview.

The former power station lay derelict since it stopped generating electricity in 1983, but is undergoing a £9 billion ($11.26 billion) makeover to turn the 42-acre space into offices, apartments, shops and leisure facilities. The new “Apple complex” will take over 40% of the office space.

Facebook, Google, Apple and Snapchat have all announced major investments in London in the past few months, underlining the capital’s status as a technology hub.

Copyright Agence France-Presse, 2017

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