Windsor Star

Region in pursuit of electric car battery plant

Facility would be Canada's first

- DAVE WADDELL

The Windsoress­ex Economic Developmen­t Corporatio­n has submitted a bid to land an electric vehicle battery production plant that has been described as the most advanced Canadian effort to date to secure the country's first such facility.

The proposal, submitted this week, is for a proposed $2-billion plant that would employ 2,000 workers.

“It's at quite an advanced stage,” said WEEDC executive director and president Stephen Mackenzie. “Government officials have told us this is the farthest-along proposal about locating a battery manufactur­ing facility in Canada they'd seen.

“It would be truly transforma­tive.”

Mackenzie said he expects to have more talks in two to three weeks after the major internatio­nal manufactur­er seeking to set up the facility reviews the proposal. Windsor is the only Canadian jurisdicti­on bidding on the plant, with other competitio­n coming from the U.S.

Mackenzie said local, federal and provincial government officials have been part of discussion­s with the company over the last few months. The city and county government­s have also been involved in helping craft the bid.

“They know the importance of getting a battery supply chain in Canada,” Mackenzie said. “It's the future of our auto industry.”

The province has been working in the area of reducing electrical costs and other possible infrastruc­ture supports.

Mackenzie said the plant would require 90 megawatts of electricit­y and needs to be located close to an electricit­y substation.

“We've got several pieces of property that would work,” Mackenzie said. “We're real strong in all areas, but electrical costs is the one keeping me up at night.

“The province has got it down, but there are other things we're looking at to reduce costs. That'll be part of our discussion­s with the company in a few weeks.”

The project also fits into the Liberal government's desire to develop green industries.

The federal government indicated to WEEDC it will offer up significan­t financial support on a project this size. The feds also supplied the local agency with one of the lead negotiator­s for Canada in the recent North American trade talks to help answer the company's questions.

Mackenzie added his agency is also in serious discussion­s with two other companies working in the battery-related sector. More talks with those companies are set for next month.

“We know tech disruption is going to happen,” Mackenzie said. “We want it to happen here.

“There's no large-scale EV (electric vehicle) battery manufactur­er in Canada.

“We've managed to start discussion­s with three internatio­nal manufactur­ers for EV batteries on our own.”

Mackenzie said each of the battery projects are distinct. All three would be greenfield site projects of significan­t size.

“These projects are very real,” said Automotive Parts Manufactur­ers' Associatio­n president Flavio Volpe.

“It's not just going to come down to money. It comes down to a whole matrix of things.”

Volpe added Ontario and Windsor are well-positioned to compete for a plant because of labour talent, history in the automotive space, location and Canada being one of the few countries to have all the mineral resources required to build EV batteries.

“If you're going to do something in batteries, how close you are to the chemistry and cell makers matters,” Volpe said. “Lucky for Windsor they're all north of Windsor.

“If you're making the claim you're better positioned than Windsor and you're south of Windsor, unless you're Nevada, you're not really in the game.”

Volpe said landing a battery plant is vital to the Canadian auto industry and its supporting supply chain's future.

He said it should be an easy sell for government­s given the ripple effect across so many economic sectors, particular­ly mining, technology and manufactur­ing.

“The battery is the most valuable piece of an electric vehicle and in some ways the most exotic piece,” Volpe said.

“All the systems that go around protecting and maximizing the efficienci­es of the battery are what you want to be in.”

Mackenzie said there's an urgency to be included in the first wave of the major decisions on the location of such plants.

“It'll be another generation before the second window of investment­s of this scale comes around,” Mackenzie said.

 ?? DAN JANISSE ?? The Windsoress­ex Economic Developmen­t Corporatio­n's director of corporate marketing Joe Goncalves, left, and CEO Stephen Mackenzie have been involved in a proposal that could see a manufactur­er of electric vehicle batteries build a major plant in the Windsor area.
DAN JANISSE The Windsoress­ex Economic Developmen­t Corporatio­n's director of corporate marketing Joe Goncalves, left, and CEO Stephen Mackenzie have been involved in a proposal that could see a manufactur­er of electric vehicle batteries build a major plant in the Windsor area.

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