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Stellantis halts battery plant development over cash dispute with Canadian authorities



Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau greets a Stellantis auto assembly worker during a tour of the Windsor Assembly Plant in Windsor, Ontario, in January. (Reuters)

 

OTTAWA — Automaker Stellantis has stopped all construction at a more-than C$5 billion ($3.74 billion U.S.) electric vehicle battery manufacturing plant in Windsor, Canada, over a disagreement with the federal government about subsidies, a spokesperson for the company said on Monday.

“Effective immediately, all construction related to the battery module production on the Windsor site has stopped,” the spokesperson said.

A spokesperson for Canada’s Innovation Minister Francois-Philippe Champagne did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

The move comes days after the carmaker and South Korea’s LG Energy Solution Ltd (LGES) said they were implementing “contingency plans” related to the plant.

“As of today, the Canadian Government has not delivered on what was agreed to, therefore Stellantis and LG Energy Solution will immediately begin implementing their contingency plans,” Stellantis said in a brief emailed statement, without elaborating.

LGES and Stellantis announced the investment last year to establish a large-scale, domestic, electric vehicle battery manufacturing facility in Canada.

At the time, Canada’s Innovation Minister Francois-Philippe Champagne described the deal, which included about $1.48 billion from LGES and undisclosed contributions from federal and provincial governments, as the largest ever in the Canadian auto sector.

A spokesperson for Champagne said on Friday that the “auto industry is crucial to the Canadian economy and to the hundreds of thousands of Canadian workers. We continue to negotiate in good faith with our partners. Our top priority is and remains getting the best deal for Canadians.”

Earlier, Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland said Canada was having “good discussions” with Stellantis, after a newspaper reported that the automaker was looking for better government subsidies than originally offered by Ottawa.

“We are, as the federal government team, working very, very hard on Stellantis, we’re very, very focused on it,” Freeland told reporters on a call after meetings with G7 partners in Japan.

Stellantis wants its deal sweetened to the level Volkswagen received this year, the Toronto Star newspaper reported earlier on Friday, citing unnamed sources.

The Star said Stellantis began seeking an enriched deal in Canada shortly after the U.S. Inflation Reduction Act, which offers $369 billion of subsidies for electric vehicles and other clean technologies, passed into law last year.

Canada’s deal with Volkswagen for a battery gigafactory, announced this year, is the biggest single investment ever in the country’s electric-vehicle supply chain. The federal government has committed to provide up to C$13.2 billion in manufacturing tax credits through 2032, while Europe’s largest carmaker is investing up to C$7 billion to build the plant St. Thomas, Ontario.

Canada, home to a large mining sector for minerals including lithium, nickel and cobalt, is trying to woo companies involved in all levels of the EV supply chain via a multi-billion-dollar green technology fund as the world seeks to cut carbon emissions.

 

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