Volvo Cars and Northvolt will open a joint research and development centre in Gothenburg, Sweden, as part of a SEK 30 billion investment in battery development and manufacturing.
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The centre, which will become operational in 2022, will create a few hundred jobs in Gothenburg and positions Volvo Cars as one of the few automotive brands to make battery cell development and production part of its end to end engineering capabilities.
The establishment of the new research and development centre in Gothenburg will be followed by the construction of a new manufacturing plant in Europe. It will produce next generation state of the art battery cells, specifically developed for use in next generation pure electric Volvo and Polestar cars.
The exact location of the plant is expected to be confirmed in early 2022.
The centre will be in close proximity to Volvo Cars’ own operations and to Northvolt’s existing innovation campus Northvolt Labs in Västerås, Sweden, ensuring synergies and efficiencies as it develops battery technologies.
The partnership will focus on developing tailor made batteries that give Volvo drivers what they want, such as range and quick charging times. Volvo Cars is working with Northvolt to create a true end to end system for batteries, whereby it develops and builds the batteries itself. This deep vertical integration is important since the battery represents the largest individual cost component in an electric car, as well as a major part of the carbon footprint.
As for their joint battery plant, Volvo Cars and Northvolt are in the final phase of a selection process to find a suitable location in Europe. The plant will have a potential annual capacity of up to 50 gigawatt hours (GWh), which would supply batteries for approximately half a million cars per year. It will start construction in 2023, with large scale production in 2026, and is expected to employ up to 3,000 people.
Alongside battery supply agreements, the partnership with Northvolt secures the European battery cell needs that are part of Volvo Cars’ ambitious electrification plans. It aims to sell 50 per cent pure electric cars by the middle of this decade, and by 2030 it aims to sell only fully electric cars. ■