Chattanooga Times Free Press

VW to build $2 billion Scout Motors plant in Columbia, South Carolina

- STAFF AND WIRE REPORTS

Volkswagen plans to build a $2 billion factory in South Carolina capable of producing 200,000 electric vehicles per year under VW’s new Scout brand.

South Carolina Gov. Henry McMaster announced Friday that VW had picked a 1,600-acre site just north of Columbia, South Carolina to build the new plant, which he said will ultimately employ 4,000 workers and could bring thousands of other jobs from automotive suppliers located nearby.

“Scout Motors will provide thousands of South Carolinian­s with previously unimagined opportunit­ies and prosperity for generation­s to come,” McMaster said in a statement. “The Palmetto State, with its rich history, superior people and sterling automotive manufactur­ing reputation, is the perfect place to restart this iconic American brand.”

Scott Keogh, the president and CEO of Scout Motors, said the South Carolina plant will “usher in this new era for Scout,” which Volkswagen acquired in 2021 when it purchased Navistar, the corporate successor of the company once known as Internatio­nal Harvester.

Headquarte­red in Tysons, Virginia, Scout was formed to craft allelectri­c trucks and SUVs built on the Scout brand that became an American icon when it debuted as the first sports utility vehicle in 1960.

“Today, we’re reimaginin­g Scout’s original ingenuity and electrifyi­ng its future,” Keogh said Friday in an announceme­nt of the new U.S. plant. “We’re bringing the Scout spirit to South Carolina, and it’s going to be a hell of a ride.”

Keogh previously oversaw VW’s assembly plant in Chattanoog­a as CEO of Volkswagen Group of America before he took over the Scout brand in January. Volkswagen’s only other U.S. assembly plant is at the Enterprise South industrial park in Chattanoog­a where VW makes the Atlas SUV and the all-electric ID.4 SUV under the Volkswagen brand.

The VW assembly plant’s sprawling Enterprise South industrial park location still has hundreds of acres set aside to accommodat­e future manufactur­ing of vehicles or supply chains for VW, including the possibilit­y of another auto assembly plant. Although VW picked South Carolina for the Scout plant, Chattanoog­a could still be a site for future battery and vehicle production.

Reuters has reported Volkswagen is looking at expanding its existing Chattanoog­a factory to produce the electric ID.Buzz, the successor of the once-popular Microbus.

Keogh said the 2022 Inflation Reduction Act provided extra incentives to commit to building cars and trucks in the United States.

“We think it’s important to manufactur­e in America, certainly without a doubt, the Inflation Reduction Act, combined with what the states are doing, make it a smart time to buy versus rent,” Keogh told the online news service Tech Crunch on Friday.

Scout will reportedly receive support from the South Carolina government, but the incentives package was not disclosed Friday.

Keogh said the decision to locate in South Carolina came down to many factors, including an existing infrastruc­ture for the automotive industry and what Keogh called an “extremely strong port.” The port of Charleston, which is about two hours from Columbia, is the eighth-largest in the United States.

Scout Motors will be the second German automaker to locate in South Carolina. BMW has a manufactur­ing facility near Spartanbur­g, South Carolina which employs nearly 11,000 workers.

Scout trucks and rugged SUVs will be built on a newly designed all-electric platform, Keogh said. Vehicle production is targeted to begin by the end of 2026, McMaster said.

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