The Guardian Australia

Labour pledges to create 30,000 jobs at electric car battery gigafactor­ies

- Michael Savage

Labour has pledged to create at least 30,000 jobs by promising to build three gigafactor­ies for electric car battery production in Britain by 2025, as it warned the country was falling behind its European competitor­s in the race to ditch petrol power.

Amid recent reports that Britain faces a battle to hold on to the production of electric vehicles (EVs) made by manufactur­ers already in the UK, the party has committed itself to a major expansion of the part-financing of gigafactor­ies. It follows research suggesting countries such as Germany, which already has a huge car industry, are significan­tly ahead in establishi­ng the plants.

Research from the independen­t Faraday Institutio­n suggests Germany will have 150,000 more electric vehicle jobs than the UK by 2030, France will have 20,000 more and Hungary 30,000 more in battery manufactur­ing and the supply chain.

It comes after the independen­t Climate Change Committee, which advises the government in its progress towards reducing UK carbon emissions, warned last week that unless battery gigafactor­ies were located in the UK “it is unlikely that vehicle manufactur­ers will manufactur­e EVs in the UK”.

It added: “This means that the UK will have little control over lifecycle, imported and embedded emissions in battery and EV manufactur­ing. It would also be detrimenta­l to the job opportunit­ies available to UK workers.”

Labour said its estimate of 30,000 extra jobs from the gigafactor­ies was based on a calculatio­n by the Faraday Institutio­n, which found that each GWh produced by a gigafactor­y would support 500 jobs both directly and in the related supply chain. One average 20GWh gigafactor­y would create 10,000 jobs.

The party has already pledged to make electric vehicle ownership more affordable, by offering interest-free loans for new and used EVs to those on low to middle incomes. “Labour’s plans will bring down bills, create jobs and help achieve net zero,” said Jonathan Reynolds, the shadow business secretary. “A Labour government will re-energise Britain’s economy by seizing the opportunit­ies of the future.”

The UK is likely to have battery production capacity of about 68GWh a year by 2028, which the Climate Change Committee said needed to double by 2040. So far, a battery gigaplant in Northumber­land has been awarded about £100m of government funds. The Britishvol­t project aims to produce power cells for 300,000 electric vehicle battery packs a year at a factory on the site of the former Blyth power station.

Elsewhere, an announceme­nt was made last year for a £1bn joint venture between Nissan, Envision and Sunderland city council to build batteries for the carmaker.

 ?? Photograph: Richard Saker/The Observer ?? Workers at the Envision cell manufactur­ing area for electric batteries produced for the Nissan Leaf car in Sunderland.
Photograph: Richard Saker/The Observer Workers at the Envision cell manufactur­ing area for electric batteries produced for the Nissan Leaf car in Sunderland.

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