LG Chem CEO Shin Hak-cheol (fifth from left) and Tennessee Governor Bill Lee (sixth from left) at the groundbreaking ceremony of LG Chem’s cathode plant in Clarksville, Tennessee on Dec. 19, 2023 (Courtesy of LG Chem) CLARKSVILLE, TN – South Korea’s No. 1 chemical maker LG Chem Ltd. striving to become a leading global battery materials player broke ground on its first-ever cathode plant in the US, expected to be the biggest of its kind in the world’s third-largest EV market.
The parent company of Korea’s largest EV battery maker LG Energy Solution Ltd. will inject about 2 trillion won ($1.6 billion) in the first phase to build a cathode plant with an annual capacity of 60,000 tons by 2026, enough to power 600,000 EVs with a range of 500 kilometers per charge.
Sitting on a 1.7 million-square-meter site, the plant is expected to embark on mass-production of nickel, cobalt, manganese and aluminum (NCMA) cathodes in 2026.
“The Tennessee plant will be the largest cathode-producing plant in the US,” LG Chem Chief Executive Shin Hak-cheol said before the groundbreaking ceremony on Tuesday. “Our key customers are located within a radius of 500 to 600 kilometers, which is a big advantage.”
LG Chem CEO Shin Hak-cheol speaks to reporters before the groundbreaking ceremony Tennessee is home to Ultium Cells LLC, LG’s battery joint venture with General Motors Co.
LG Chem’s first battery component-producing facility in the US will supply its high nickel cathodes to Ultium and GM.
LG Chem will make sure that its customers can make the best of the generous EV tax benefits under the US Inflation Reduction Act (IRA) with its new cathode factory.
The company said that it will use minerals and precursors shipped from nations with US free trade agreements (FTAs) to make cathodes that can receive tax incentives under the IRA.
Combined with the IRA tax breaks, LG Chem’s first cathode plant in the US is expected to enjoy generous tax benefits, as the plant is entitled to hundreds of billions of Korean won in tax incentives and subsidies from the Tennessee state government, said Shin.
To meet this goal, the company is seeking to diversify its customer base, currently centered around its subsidiary LG Energy Solution.
Shin expected the company to meet the goal despite the current slowdown in global EV demand.
(Courtesy of Yonhap) “The EV market’s annual growth rate estimate has dropped to the 20% range from the 30% level,” said Shin.
“The annual growth rate of over 20% is still too high to achieve for most industries,” added Shin, suggesting the recent slowdown is not severe enough to thwart the company’s future growth strategy focusing on battery materials.
LG Chem plans to diversify its product portfolio through next-generation cathode material products and expand the production capacity of the Tennessee plant in response to increasing demand.
The plant will be a smart factory powered by 100% renewable energy including solar and hydropower, the company said.
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