The Chronicle (UK)

‘Britishvol­t letter sent’

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IN what could be one of his last acts as Prime Minister, Boris Johnson has signed off on a £100m offer of support for a gigafactor­y in Northumber­land.

The Prime Minister confirmed yesterday afternoon that an “in principle offer of support” was sent to Britishvol­t in Cambois last night.

It is hoped that the battery factory, to be built at the former coal yards of the old Blyth

Power Station, could provide 3,000 jobs directly on the site and up to 5,000 more in the plant’s supply chain.

Wansbeck MP Ian Lavery, raising the issue at Prime Minister’s Questions, said: “In January the government committed £100m from the automotive transforma­tion fund to Britishvol­t, set to be the country’s first gigafactor­y at Cambois in my constituen­cy.

“As of today not a penny has been paid to the company and it is jeopardisi­ng up to 8,000 jobs in my constituen­cy.

“The tensions between the Prime Minister and his former Chancellor over spending have been well documented. Can the Prime Minister please instruct his new chancellor to get the cheque in the post this afternoon and ensure at least one of his government­s promises is upheld, because who knows who’ll be sitting in those seats next week?”

Mr Johnson responded by saying: “I can tell him that the letter was sent last night, in principle offer of support for this project.”

The announceme­nt means that the North East will have the UK’S first two battery gigafactor­ies, following plans from Nissan and its battery partners Envision AESC announced next year.

The developmen­ts put the region at the lead of efforts to de-carbonise the transport sector and contribute to the Government’s net zero agenda.

Britishvol­t first announced its plans for the site near Blyth in late 2020, though it warned at the time that it still needed to raise another £1.2bn to bring its vision to reality. The company acquired the site last April and secured planning permission for what will be the fourth largest building in the UK in July. Preparator­y work on the site has begun and the company will start the main constructi­on process in the first quarter of the year. Britishvol­t is aiming to produce batteries for more than 300,000 electric vehicles a year by the end of the decade.

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