Location of a battery plant that SK On, Ford and Koç had planned to set up in Turkey. SK On scrapped the plan (Courtesy of SK On) SK On Co., the world’s No. 5 electric vehicle battery maker, dropped a plan to build a 4 trillion won ($3.2 billion) plant in Turkey as higher interest rates deteriorated funding conditions and the ongoing war in Ukraine hurt the European EV market, the world's second largest.
Those three companies signed an MOU in March 2022 to set up a joint venture, SK On’s second overseas partnership, to invest up to 4 trillion won in a battery factory that was slated to generate 30 to 45 gigawatt-hours (GWh) per year starting in 2025 to meet Europe's growing EV demand.
SK On has been in talks with the partners with the aim of unveiling details of the plant in the second half of last year. But the plan hit a snag as a surge in global interest rates hurt funding conditions.
The soaring cost of electricity amid the ongoing war in Ukraine ramped up the cost of driving EVs in Europe, in some cases making them costlier to run than gas-powered cars. That dampened EV demand in Europe.
SK On may have made such a decision as its Hungary plant, a barometer for the investment plan in Türkiye, has not quickly improved its rate of defects among manufactured products, industry sources in Seoul said.
“It is most important for EV makers to procure as many batteries as they want in time,” said one of the sources.
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