National Post

‘Incendiary devices’ found at EV battery plant site

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• A company building a major factory for electric vehicle batteries in Quebec says incendiary devices were found Monday morning at its constructi­on site east of Montreal, in what is the latest act of alleged vandalism against the project.

The devices consisted of bottles filled with flammable liquid with a “rudimentar­y” ignition system, said Paolo Cerruti, co-founder of Swedish manufactur­er Northvolt AB. Cerruti, who is also CEO of Northvolt North America, told reporters the ignition system “allowed for a certain delay” before the bottles were supposed to catch fire, but “thank God it didn’t work.”

Northvolt initially called the devices “homemade bombs” in a news release, but Cerruti later referred to them as “incendiary devices.”

Cerruti said multiple bottles were placed under the tires of “certain elements of equipment” at the site. Chantal Graveline with the Richelieu-saint-laurent police force confirmed that officers had discovered incendiary devices beneath a vehicle and that an investigat­ion is underway.

Monday’s discovery is the latest act of alleged vandalism at the future site of Northvolt’s $7-billion factory for electric vehicle batteries. Straddling two communitie­s about 30 kilometres east of Montreal, Mcmastervi­lle and Saint-basile-le-grand, the 170-hectare site is scheduled to open by the end of 2026. It is expected to have an initial capacity to produce about 30 gigawatt-hours of cell manufactur­ing a year, enough to power one million vehicles.

Since it was announced in September, the project has faced opposition from environmen­tal groups and the Mohawk community, who say the plant is being built on environmen­tally sensitive land without being subjected to a proper review.

At the end of February, police opened an investigat­ion after individual­s had laid spiked mats at the site. A vehicle was also damaged.

In January, the company said nails or metal bars had been inserted into about 100 trees. An anonymous group claimed responsibi­lity on an anarchist website, saying the motive for their “sabotage” was to protest the megaprojec­t, which they said would destroy woods and wetlands and perpetuate car culture.

Cerruti said the site was being considered a crime scene and that the company was waiting for approval from police to reopen, which he expected would happen before the end of the day. He said if the objective of the vandals was to create fear among the employees of Northvolt and other companies at the site, it had the opposite effect.

“We are more determined than ever to go forward,” he said. “We have the support of the community.”

GENERALLY ... LESS IS MORE. IF YOU HAVE A NON-COMPETE THAT EFFECTIVEL­Y PREVENTS YOUR EMPLOYEE FROM WORKING ANYWHERE IN THE COUNTRY FOR FIVE YEARS, IT IS UNENFORCEA­BLE AND NOT WORTH THE PAPER IT IS WRITTEN ON. — HOWARD LEVITT AND PETER CAREY

 ?? CHRISTINNE MUSCHI / THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES ?? Security guards patrol the entrance to the constructi­on site of the new Northvolt EV battery plant in Saint-basile-le-grand, east of Montreal. The company says ‘incendiary devices’ were found at the constructi­on site.
CHRISTINNE MUSCHI / THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES Security guards patrol the entrance to the constructi­on site of the new Northvolt EV battery plant in Saint-basile-le-grand, east of Montreal. The company says ‘incendiary devices’ were found at the constructi­on site.

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