Electric Vehicles

Volvo Car Group and Northvolt to produce sustainable batteries

Volvo Car Group has announced plans for a joint venture with Swedish battery maker, Northvolt, to develop sustainable batteries for its electric cars and set up a gigafactory for production.
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Alec Peachey
ev battery

Volvo Car Group has announced plans for a joint venture with Swedish battery maker, Northvolt, to develop sustainable batteries for its electric cars and set up a gigafactory for production.

The companies aim to set up a research and development centre in Sweden to begin operations in 2022 and start a gigafactory in Europe with a potential capacity to produce up to 50 gigawatt hours (GWh) per year in 2026.

Håkan Samuelsson, chief executive at Volvo Car Group, said: “Working closely with Northvolt will also allow us to strengthen our in-house development capabilities.”

Northvolt will become Volvo Cars’ exclusive battery cell production partner in Europe.

The gigafactory will be powered by clean energy and is expected to employ around 3,000 people. The location of the plant has yet to be decided.

Northvolt raised $2.75 billion in equity this month to expand capacity at the factory it is building in northern Sweden, and Volvo plans to source battery cells from that battery plant starting in 2024.

Battery makers are scrambling to keep up with demand as carmakers switch to electric in order to reduce planet-warming carbon emissions.

Volvo Cars aims to sell 50% pure electric cars by the middle of this decade, and by 2030 it aims to sell only fully electric cars.

Electric successor to Volvo’s XC60 model will be the first car to feature battery cells developed through the joint venture.

Image: Shutterstock

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