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Daily Newsletter

10 October 2023

Daily Newsletter

10 October 2023

JV backed by VW Group to build battery materials facility in Poland

IONWAY picks Poland for new Cathode Active Material facility

Dani Cole October 10 2023

European EV battery materials producer IONWAY has chosen to build its first Cathode Active Material (CAM) production plant in Nysa, Poland.

It will be next to Umicore’s existing CAM plant, Volkswagen has announced.

IONWAY is a joint venture is backed by Volkswagen’s PowerCO and Umicore.

IONWAY wants to grow its annual production capacity to 160 GWh per annum by the end of the decade. The plant is expected to create around 900 jobs in Nysa.

The Polish government is offering IONWAY €350 million in cash grants under the Temporary Crisis and Transition Framework for a total investment of up to €1.7 billion (€ 1.35 billion after grants) by the end of the decade.

Thomas Jansseune, CEO of IONWAY said: "Today’s launch of IONWAY signals PowerCo’s and Umicore’s commitment to sustainable progress that makes electric cars affordable for everybody, starting now.”

Jörg Teichmann, Chief Purchasing Officer of PowerCo said: “IONWAY gives both PowerCo and Umicore a significant first-mover advantage in the fast-growing e-mobility market in Europe. PowerCo has now co-created what it was looking for: a battery materials supplier to secure and build-up manufacturing capacity for reliable and cost-competitive precursor and cathode material production based on responsibly sourced raw materials.”

Preparation of the site, engineering, and permitting are ongoing and the company says construction will start when local planning permissions are approved.

High upfront costs could be detrimental towards the growth of the off-highway EV market

The global off-highway electric market is expected to grow at a CAGR of 17.4% by 2030, per GlobalData. Despite the strong growth, high upfront costs may pose a challenge. Due to the high capacity of these vehicles, they consume large amounts of power from a number of battery packs installed on the vehicle, whose high cost in turn adds to the cost of the vehicle, thereby increasing the initial cost. However, governments worldwide are offering subsidies and tax exemptions in order to help customers to counter the initial purchase cost.

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