By Mandar Bakre on Tuesday, 09 January 2024
Category: Buzz

EU approves €902 mn aid for Northvolt's EV battery plant in Germany

Decision helps keep the plant in Europe in the face of competing incentives from America

The European Union has approved €902 million in aid for Swedish company Northvolt to set up an electric vehicle battery plant in Germany. The aid is similar to incentives being offered by US Inflation Reduction Act and will help keep Northvolt's plant within Europe.

In a release, the EU said the approval was in line with its Green Deal Investment Plan and the aid was being approved "to support measures in sectors which are key to accelerate the green transition and reduce fuel dependencies." The EU also found that the project was being carried out in "a disadvantaged area" and that "the beneficiary [Northvolt] has set itself the goal of building the world's most environmentally friendly battery, which produces significantly less CO2 emissions than other companies when measured on produced level including recycling at the end of life." 

Northvolt plans to build its third battery giga factory – of 60 GWh annual capacity – in the German city of Heide. The plant, Northvolt Drei, will be a highly-automated factory powered with renewable energy. The German government has been allowed to offer €700 million in direct grants and €202 million in guarantees to the plant, which is expected to begin production in 2026 and reach full capacity during 2029. Depending on battery size, it will support 800,000 to 1 million EVs a year. 

Margrethe Vestager, Executive Vice-President in charge of EU competition policy, said in a release: "This €902 million German measure is the first individual aid being approved to prevent an investment from being diverted away from Europe, under the new possibility offered by the Temporary Crisis and Transition Framework since March 2023. It enables Germany to support the construction of Northvolt's production plant of batteries for electric vehicles. This is an important step for the electrification of transport in Europe, while preserving the level playing field in the Single Market."

Breakthrough in battery tech: Northvolt adds sodium-ion batteries to its portfolio -  

Europe has approved emergency measures for state aid to several critical sectors, including new energy areas. Among the measures, until December 31, 2025, EU member states can:

Leave Comments