Japan’s Honda Motor Co (7267.T) will set up a new lithium-ion battery plant for electric vehicles in the United States with Korean battery supplier LG Energy Solution Ltd (373220.KS), the two companies said on Monday.
Battery makers are looking to increase production in the U.S. where a shift toward electric vehicles (EV) could increase as the country implements stricter regulation and tightens tax credit eligibility, Reuters reported.
The investment will be $4.4 billion, the two companies said in a statement, aiming for annual production capacity of approximately 40 GWh with the batteries supplied exclusively to Honda facilities in North America to power Honda and Acura EV models.
The pair are expected to establish a joint venture before building the plant, with the start of construction planned for early 2023 and mass-production by the end of 2025.
The location has not been finalised, they said, but the Nikkei business daily reported they are considering Ohio, where Honda’s main factory is located.
The U.S. government has been pushing policies designed to bring more battery and EV manufacturing into the country.
President Joe Biden signed a $430 billion climate, health care and tax bill this month that would render electric vehicles assembled outside North America ineligible for tax credits.
California announced a plan last week requiring all new vehicles sold in the state by 2035 to be either electric or plug-in electric hybrids.
The two companies said a combination of strong local electric vehicle production and the timely supply of batteries would put them “in the best position to target the rapidly-growing North American EV market”.
LG Energy Solution, which is mainly engaged in the development of lithium-ion battery materials and next-generation batteries, also supplies EV batteries and has signed joint-venture agreements with General Motors, Hyundai Motor Co (005380.KS) and Stellantis.
In July, Panasonic Energy Co, a unit of tech conglomerate Panasonic Holdings Corp (6752.T) and a major Tesla Inc supplier, said it had selected Kansas as the site for a new battery plant with investment of up to $4 billion.
Earlier this year, Honda laid out a target to roll out 30 EV models globally and produce about 2 million EVs a year by 2030.