Chattanooga Times Free Press

Hyundai rapidly builds its first EV plant in US

- BY RUSS BYNUM

ELLABELL, Ga. — The steel skeletons of buildings where Hyundai will stamp, weld, paint and assemble electric vehicles in Georgia span more than a half mile on a sprawling site dotted with so many cranes, bulldozers and constructi­on workers that it almost looks like they’re building a small city.

A year has passed since Hyundai Motor Group broke ground on the $7.6 billion vehicle and battery plant, the South Korean automaker’s first U.S. factory dedicated to producing EVs. Hyundai officials said more than 2,000 people are working each week on the rapidly progressin­g project west of Savannah, which the company calls its American “metaplant.”

“The site is advancing every day as we work diligently to complete this amazing project,” Hyundai Motor Group Metaplant America CEO Oscar Kwon told reporters visiting the site Wednesday. “We are on track to start production in early 2025 — or, as my boss Jose Munoz likes to say, if not sooner.”

Munoz, Hyundai’s president and global chief operating officer, said last month that the company has accelerate­d constructi­on to take advantage of federal incentives that reward domestic production of EVs. He said it’s possible the plant could open before the end of next year.

Officials at the constructi­on site Wednesday said the foundation work for the factory’s main production buildings is almost finished and the framework of more than 27,000 tons of steel is more than 80% complete. Some have roofs and floors, and exterior wall panels have begun to go up.

“It’s hard to believe what has occurred in just one year,” said Trip Tollison, president and CEO of the Savannah Area Economic Developmen­t Authority, one of the key local agencies that worked with state officials to lure Hyundai to Georgia.

The plant is being built parallel to Interstate 16 on a site that covers more than 2,900 acres. Hyundai says it will build 300,000 EVs each year at the plant. The site will also manufactur­e batteries to power those vehicles in a partnershi­p between Hyundai and LG Energy Solution.

Hyundai offered a first look Wednesday at some features of the finished plant. Artist renderings showed buildings with plentiful windows and skylights to maximize natural lighting indoors, a large covered parking lot for employees topped with solar panels, and an elevated bridge with glass sides that will let people outside see unfinished cars moving by conveyor from the paint shop to the assembly plant.

The plant will employ 8,500 workers. Tollison said suppliers opening shop in nine Georgia counties near the Hyundai plant will create another 6,000 jobs.

It’s the largest economic developmen­t project in Georgia’s history. And it came with a whopping incentive package, with state officials and local government­s offering $2.1 billion in tax breaks.

Pat Wilson, Georgia’s economic developmen­t commission­er, has said Hyundai is projected to have a direct payroll of $4.7 billion over the next 10 years. The company has promised to pay workers a yearly average of $58,105, plus benefits.

 ?? AP PHOTO/RUSS BYNUM ?? On Wednesday, a factory building is under constructi­on at Hyundai’s first U.S. plant for manufactur­ing electric vehicles, in Ellabell, Ga.
AP PHOTO/RUSS BYNUM On Wednesday, a factory building is under constructi­on at Hyundai’s first U.S. plant for manufactur­ing electric vehicles, in Ellabell, Ga.

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