Times Colonist

Quebec, Ottawa pledge $300 million for GM electric car battery component plant

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The government­s of Quebec and Canada have announced $300 million in funding for a factory that will make components for electric vehicle batteries in Bécancour, Que., located about halfway between Montreal and Quebec City.

The $600-million factory, a joint project between automaker General Motors and South Korean industrial materials maker POSCO Future M, was first announced by the companies last year.

The factory will manufactur­e cathode-active materials, a key component of lithium-ion batteries found in electric cars, and is expected to employ around 200 people when it opens in 2025.

Quebec Premier François Legault said the factory, which is under constructi­on, sends a signal that Quebec is open to investment from internatio­nal companies as he attempts to make the province a leader in green energy.

“We have an exceptiona­l opportunit­y,” he told reporters in Bécancour. “We have HydroQuébe­c, so we have clean energy. We have strategic minerals, like lithium.”

Legault said his government is lending the companies $152 million, of which

$132 million will be forgiven if the factory maintains the promised jobs for 10 years.

“It’s win-win for Quebec,” he said, adding the jobs will lead to higher tax revenue.

The project is part of a larger green energy corridor that includes Bécancour and the nearby cities of Trois-Rivières and Shawinigan, which are home to a number of companies and research institutio­ns doing work related to electric vehicles, Legault said.

Federal Industry Minister François-Philippe Champagne told reporters Ottawa will provide a “contributi­on” of up to $147 million, but he did not specify the nature of the funding.

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