Windsor Star

St. Clair Township in the running for $3-billion battery plant: MP

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Sarnia-lambton MP Marilyn Gladu says St. Clair Township is in the running to be home to a new $3-billion battery manufactur­ing plant which, if it goes ahead, would be the third battery manufactur­ing site in the region.

Two giant electric vehicle battery plants expected to employ thousands of workers are now under constructi­on in Southweste­rn Ontario, one being built by automaker Stellantis in Windsor and another by auto giant Volkswagen in St. Thomas.

“Nothing has been confirmed about an EV plant yet,” Jeff Agar, mayor of St. Clair Township, said Monday.

“I'm aware there was one that was looking at that location and, as far as I know, still is,” said Sarnia Mayor Mike Bradley. “It would have regional impact.”

Bradley said the proposal by a company that hasn't been disclosed to local officials has “been around the area for at least a year” and “there's some issues there with servicing St. Clair is trying to address.”

The “main limiting factor for us to stay in the game” is that once Diageo opens a whisky distillery it announced for St. Clair Township, the St. Clair Township's Courtright waste water treatment plant will reach 90 per cent of its capacity, Gladu said.

“In order to secure the site as an option” for the proposed battery plant “we have to have” funding to upgrade that waste water plant, she said.

Gladu said she received a presentati­on from the Sarnia-lambton Economic Partnershi­p “on what was required” and approached Sean Fraser, Canada's housing, infrastruc­ture and communitie­s minister, and Francois-phillippe Champagne, minister of innovation, science and industry, in early March about federal funding for the sewage system upgrade.

“We need at least a commitment letter in order to keep the process going,” she said. “Hopefully, they'll move quickly.”

Agar said the township is looking for federal and provincial funding to help it expand its Courtright waste water treatment plant.

The expansion, which is in the engineerin­g and environmen­tal assessment stage, is currently expected to cost $45 million to $50 million, Agar said.

The Courtright plant collects and treats waste water from the township communitie­s of Corunna, Mooretown and Courtright, as well as outlying industrial areas.

Government funding to help St. Clair Township expand its sewage capacity “would put us in a very good position,” Gladu said

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