San Diego Union-Tribune

HYUNDAI ANNOUNCES $5.5B ELECTRIC VEHICLE PLANT IN GEORGIA

Company plans to produce up to 300K vehicles per year

- BY RUSS BYNUM Bynum writes for Associated Press.

Hyundai Motor Group confirmed Friday the company will spend $5.5 billion on a huge electric vehicle plant near Savannah that will employ thousands — a deal Georgia’s governor called the largest economic developmen­t project in the state’s history.

Hyundai Motor Group CEO Jaehoon Chang made the announceme­nt with Gov. Brian Kemp at the site of the future factory in Bryan County, where state and local officials purchased a flat, sprawling tract for $61 million last year in hopes of luring a major manufactur­er.

“Hard-working Georgians are going to have the opportunit­y to have a really high-paying, advanced manufactur­ing job with a great company,” Kemp said in an interview.

Hyundai said it will employ at least 8,100 workers at the plant near the unincorpor­ated town of Ellabell. It will be Hyundai’s first U.S. plant dedicated to assembling electric vehicles and will also produce vehicle batteries.

“This new, high tech EV plant represents the future of our business,” Chang told more than 100 people sipping champagne under a tent pitched at the site on a dusty field of cleared dirt.

Hyundai Motors said it plans to start constructi­on early next year and in 2025 begin producing up to 300,000 vehicles per year. The company didn’t say which vehicle models the Georgia plant will make. In a video shown at the Georgia announceme­nt, Hyundai Motors Chairman Euisun Chung said it will produce “a wide range of exciting, innovative EVs for our American customers.”

The company and state officials said they expect suppliers to invest an additional $1 billion in the area.

“It’s going to continue to bring wealth and opportunit­y to the region,” said Kemp, who predicted a ripple effect that will boost businesses from Savannah’s already booming seaport to restaurant­s and convenienc­e stores.

The announceme­nt came as President Joe Biden is visiting South Korea. He was scheduled to meet with Hyundai’s CEO in Seoul on Sunday. Jake Sullivan, the president’s national security adviser, told reporters Biden “will have the opportunit­y to say thank you for this significan­t investment that will occur in the United States.”

The timing was fortunate for Kemp, who is being challenged by former U.S. Sen. David Perdue in a Republican primary election that will be decided Tuesday.

It’s the second huge electric vehicle plant announced in Georgia in less than a year. Rivian Automotive announced in December plans for a $5 billion electric truck plant east of Atlanta that’s expected to employ about 7,500 workers.

Kemp declined to discuss details of what incentives and tax breaks the company was offered for locating in Georgia. Rivian received and package worth $1.5 billion.

The state of Georgia and partner local government­s bought 2,200 acres in Bryan County a year ago to lure a large manufactur­er. It wasn’t large enough for Hyundai. The state and its partners purchased two additional neighborin­g tracts to expand the site to more than 2,900 acres.

That’s more than 4.5 square miles dedicated to the Hyundai project. Officials declined to give the sale price of the extra acreage, saying the property was under contract but the deal hadn’t been finalized.

The plant site sits adjacent to Interstate 16 that links Savannah and Macon, not far from its intersecti­on with Interstate 95 that spans the Eastern Seaboard. It’s also near to the Port of Savannah, the fourth-busiest U.S. seaport.

Kemp predicted the Hyundai plant will become one of the biggest customers for Savannah’s port, which has already seen explosive growth in recent years.

Hyundai Motor Group sells cars under the Hyundai and Kia brands. The South Korean automaker already operates two American assembly plants in Montgomery, Alabama, and in West Point, Ga.

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