The Oakland Press

Volvo may move investment­s to U.S. if Europe’s green-tech push falls short

- By Rafaela Lindeberg Bloomberg

Volvo is joining a growing roster of manufactur­ers considerin­g moving investment­s to the United States if Europe doesn’t bolster aid in response to President Joe Biden’s landmark green subsidy push.

The Inflation Reduction Act, which promises roughly $370 billion in clean-energy subsidies, will strongly increase demand for emissions-free trucks in the United States, said Volvo Chief Executive Officer Martin Lundstedt.

“If nothing happens in Europe, we will have to think about where we’re going to put the initial investment­s to scale up capacity for some of the technologi­es in the value chain,” Lundstedt said in an interview. “This is not a threat, it’s driven by customer demand and where volumes will accelerate.”

The IRA has fueled concerns that Europe will fall behind in the race to overhaul industries amid rising costs in the region. Sweden’s Northvolt said in November it’s considerin­g postponing its planned factory in northern Germany and instead investing first in North America.

The European Union proposed its own greentech road map last week to keep industries competitiv­e and catch up to the United States and China. But its plan, which E.U. leaders are to discuss this week, received a mixed reception, with some concerned that the subsidies will only help richer countries, and others warning of a transatlan­tic trade war.

Volvo is developing trucks running on batteries, hydrogen and renewable fuels and is in the process of ramping up related infrastruc­ture. Together with Daimler Truck and Volkswagen’s Traton, the Swedish company is planning to spend 500 million euros ($539 million) in the next years to install at least 1,700 chargers in Europe for heavy-duty vehicles.

Lundstedt said he expects any updated European green-technology push to speak a clearer message on the region’s commitment for charging infrastruc­ture, battery factories and purchasing incentives for zero-emissions vehicles.

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