Stellantis And Mercedes-Benz Halt Work On EV Battery Factories

Automotive Cells Company (ACC), a joint venture between Stellantis, Mercedes-Benz, and TotalEnergies, halted work on two electric vehicle battery gigafactories in Europe, citing a slowdown in EV sales growth

The European joint venture had planned three battery factories in the European Union with a total investment of roughly $7.6 billion by 2030: one in Kaiserslautern, Germany, one in Termoli, Italy, and one in Douvrin, France (pictured).

The latter went online last year, but the other two are now in limbo as ACC is trying to figure out how to proceed during a time when the projections of some EV makers were a bit too optimistic.

“We are going to adjust our investment plan to the scheme at which Europe is going to adopt EVs,” Stellantis CEO Carlos Tavares said to reporters in Italy yesterday, according to Bloomberg. “If the European market shifts to EVs faster than the plan, we will invest faster. If the European market shift is slower, then we will invest slower.”

ACC Chief Executive Officer Yann Vincent said that demand for EVs has slowed in Europe, with growth expected only in mass market segments. As a result, the German battery gigafactory might end up making lithium iron phosphate (LFP) cells, which are cheaper than nickel manganese cobalt (NMC) batteries, but they’re also less energy-dense.

The company said it needed to research and develop these lower-cost batteries to supply cheaper EVs.

However, the future of the former Opel factory in Kaiserslautern will be decided in late 2024 or early 2025, when ACC will confirm its industrial and construction timeline, according to Automotive News.

Meanwhile, plans for the plant in Termoli, Italy, which previously manufactured engines and transmissions, haven’t been announced yet.

Each of the three factories was supposed to have an output of 40 gigawatt-hours per year, enough to power roughly 600,000 cars.

Now, with two factories temporarily out of the picture and the France facility having a capacity of only 13 GWh/year, the future looks a bit grim in terms of output.

Meanwhile, Mercedes-Benz, which holds a 30 percent stake in ACC, said in a statement that it remains committed to the joint venture and that its electrification plans remain unchanged.

Stellantis has a 45 percent stake, while Saft, a subsidiary of TotalEnergies, owns 25 percent of the company.

See more here insideevs.com

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Comments (3)

  • Avatar

    Anapat

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    Just dump it to the Chinese so they don’t need to build another one in Marocco right beside the Lithium mine. Save the planet!

    Reply

  • Avatar

    ChoppedDog

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    Hmmm….

    What happened to the fine Opel factory?

    They’d solve the Battery issues by using the Graphene Oxide Tech they’re already using to power the world’s Zombies.

    Reply

  • Avatar

    Dave

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    EVs, Unsafe at any Speed!🔥🔥🔥

    Reply

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