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India’s Tata to build battery gigafactory in UK: Update

  • Spanish Market: Battery materials, Emissions, Metals
  • 19/07/23

Adds UK battery industry reaction

Indian conglomerate Tata's parent firm Tata Sons will build a 40 GWh/yr battery cell gigafactory in the UK.

Automobile firm Tata Motors and its subsidiary Jaguar Land Rover (JLR) will be "anchor customers" for the gigafactory, with supplies to begin in 2026, Tata said on 19 July.

Tata Sons will invest over £4bn ($5.2bn) to build the gigafactory, with the aim of providing electric mobility and renewable energy storage facilities for customers in the UK and Europe, Tata said. The gigafactory will "establish a competitive green tech ecosystem in the UK at scale", the firm added. The gigafactory will produce sustainable battery cells and packs for several applications in the mobility and energy sectors, but no further details were provided. The plant will use processes such as battery recycling to recover and reuse raw materials, with the aim to maximise its renewable energy mix at 100pc.

"The new gigafactory will provide almost half of the car battery production needed in the UK by 2030," UK prime minister Rishi Sunak said in a tweet. "And it will mean the UK is perfectly positioned to be a global leader in battery technology."

The UK's battery production plans were dealt a blow earlier this year when start-up Britishvolt — which had planned to build the country's first gigafactory — went into administration in January and has since been bought by Australian renewable energy firm Recharge Industries. The country needs 90 GWh/yr of gigafactory capacity by 2030 to meet its EV manufacturing needs, according to the Society of Motor Manufactures and Traders (SMMT).

Electric vehicles (EVs) represented over a third of the 66,527 vehicles produced in the UK in April, according to the SMMT. EV output was at 113,315 units over January-April. The UK government has included a 22pc and 52pc EV mandate for 2024 and 2028, respectively, in its 2022 zero emission vehicle mandate proposal.

Cautious optimism

Key figures in the UK battery industry have welcomed Tata's announcement but are advising caution and urging the government to also support the wider EV value chain.

"While this is a very significant development for UK battery manufacturing, I truly hope that other companies in the battery, critical minerals, charging and EV supply chains won't be neglected," FairCharge UK founder Quentin Wilson said. "The government should see this subsidy as the beginning of building a battery ecosystem in this country. There is a genuine fear in the industry that it could sweep up all available government support," he said.

The government needed to adopt a more "holistic" approach to batteries, focusing on critical minerals as well as gigafactories, UK-based Battery Recycling chief scientist Diana Mehta said. "This announcement is instrumental in ensuring the UK remains competitive in the battery race. Gigafactories, however, are only one element of a thriving battery industry. Similar attention and support must be given to the rest of the battery supply chain, both upstream and downstream," she said.

Others warned that the UK needs to diversify its gigafactory projects among different companies or face problems in the future. The founder of UK automotive consultancy Palmer Automotive and former chief executive of Aston Martin Lagonda, Andy Palmer, had a stark warning."If the UK dishes out the bulk of its battery-related support to one brand, then we still face likely car industry Armageddon," he said. "Support must come in all shapes and sizes for businesses of all shapes and sizes. One gigafactory doesn't equal success, it equals part of the puzzle. We need a harmonious, collaborative, strategic industrial strategy that lifts all boats. Or the tide will sweep the UK automotive sector into the deep abyss."


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