Ultium Cells, General Motors and LG Energy Solution executives join Tennessee Governor Bill Lee to announce the additional $275 million investment in Ultium Cells (Courtesy of Wade Payne for Ultium Cells) South Korean battery maker LG Energy Solution Ltd. and General Motors Co. plan to inject an additional $275 million in a US electric vehicle battery plant, under construction in Spring Hill, Tennessee, raising its production capacity by 40%.
The two firms’ joint venture Ultium Cells LLC said Friday it is aiming to increase the plant’s annual output from 35 gigawatt-hours (GWh) to 50 GWh, as well as ramp up job creations by 400 to around 1,700.
The JV is taking the appropriate steps to support GM’s plan for more than 1 million units of EV capacity in North America by mid-decade, Tom Gallagher, Ultium Cells LLC vice president of operations, said in a statement.
In Addition to the Tennessee-based plant, Ultium Cells is constructing an EV battery factory in Lansing Delta Township, Michigan and will begin production in late 2024. The JV also started production in a battery plant in Warren, Ohio in August of this year.
Ultium Cells expects to have more than 130 GWh of battery cell capacity when all three facilities are at full production capacity.
It aims to make 120,000 tons of the battery material yearly, which is the largest production capacity in the US and enough to manufacture batteries for 1.2 million units of EVs. The cathode plant will start mass production in late 2025.
Write to Hyung-Kyu Kim at khk@hankyung.com Jihyun Kim edited this article.
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