Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Toyota N.C. factory to get another $8B

- HANNAH SCHOENBAUM Schoenbaum is a member of The Associated Press/Report for America Statehouse News Initiative.

RALEIGH, N.C. — Toyota will invest an additional $8 billion in the hybrid and electric vehicle battery factory it’s constructi­ng in North Carolina, more than doubling its prior investment­s and expected number of new jobs, the company said Tuesday.

The Japanese automotive manufactur­er projects that the new investment will create about 3,000 additional jobs, bringing the total to more than 5,000 jobs when its first U.S. automotive battery plant begins operations in Liberty, south of Greensboro, in 2025. The plant will serve as Toyota’s epicenter of lithium-ion battery production in North America and will be a key supplier for the Kentucky-based plant that’s tasked with building its first U.S.-made electric vehicles, the company said.

Toyota’s fourth and largest investment in the North Carolina facility brings its total investment to about $13.9 billion to help meet its goal of selling 1.5 million to 1.8 million electric or hybrid vehicles in the United States by 2030. It will also add eight new production lines for electric and plug-in hybrid batteries.

“North Carolina’s transition to a clean energy economy is bringing better-paying jobs that will support our families and communitie­s for decades to come,” said Democratic Gov. Roy Cooper, who recently returned from a trip to Tokyo, where he met with Toyota’s president, Koji Sato.

Sean Suggs, president of Toyota North Carolina, said the announceme­nt “reinforces Toyota’s commitment to electrific­ation and carbon reduction” while fulfilling its promise to bring economic growth to North Carolina. Toyota has committed to using 100% renewable energy to produce batteries at the North Carolina plant, which has been under constructi­on since 2021.

The automaker has been accused by environmen­tal groups of dragging its feet on electric-vehicle production and relying heavily on its sale of hybrids, which use some gasoline. Toyota says it will have 15 battery-electric vehicles for sale globally by 2025.

Automotive manufactur­ers have been racing to meet the rising demand for electric vehicles in the United States, which is responsibl­e for only about 8% of the world’s battery production capacity, according to the U.S. Department of Energy.

The U.S. still relies on internatio­nal markets to mine and process most raw materials needed to make lithiumion batteries, but the nation has been working to shore up production after a backlog in the global supply of computer chips — another essential component of electric vehicles — led several American automakers to shut down their production lines at the height of the pandemic.

President Joe Biden’s administra­tion has since poured billions of dollars into bolstering the domestic supply chain for batteries, computer chips and other necessary electric vehicle parts through the Inflation Reduction Act.

Some state government­s have made investment­s of their own, hoping to attract major manufactur­ers to the area. Toyota could receive hundreds of millions of dollars in cash incentives, tax breaks and infrastruc­ture upgrades from the state of North Carolina and local government­s for fulfilling its job-creation and investment goals, according to state officials and documents.

Republican state Senate leader Phil Berger called the company’s latest investment monumental. The plant is expected to breathe new life into the Greensboro-area economy, which never fully recovered after its textile industry dried up at the turn of the century.

“The additional jobs and increased capital investment are proof that the Triad and our rural communitie­s are prepared to support high-tech manufactur­ing,” Berger said of the central North Carolina region encompassi­ng Greensboro, Winston-Salem and High Point.

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