Large Eurocell battery factory will not be located in Emmen

The investment of billions to build a large battery factory of the British-Korean battery maker Eurocell in Emmen has been shelved. That is what Deputy Henk Brink (VVD) said in the Radio Drenthe program cassata.

The battery manufacturer’s plan to build a ‘gigafactory’ in the Northern Netherlands dates from last year. Not only Emmen was in the picture for this; the Eemshaven in Groningen also seemed an important candidate for a location.

In April, a delegation from the province and municipality of Emmen traveled to Taiwan in the hope of doing good business with the battery manufacturer.

According to it Financial Daily there are internal problems at Eurocell’s Korean parent company and the project has therefore been shelved. The factory can still be built in Eemshaven, although this will happen with considerable delays, because construction should have started this year.

Deputy Brink, who does not comment on the opportunities of the Eemshaven, in any case rules out the factory coming to Emmen. The VVD member points to the more unfavorable conditions in the Netherlands, for example compared to France. “There you have such conditions in the field of power and electricity. The country, for example, focuses more on nuclear power plants,” he emphasizes. “These are conditions that we cannot match.”

The new factory involved an investment of 800 million euros, an amount that could later have risen to 2 billion euros. According to the company, the financing was already 85 percent completed in August last year.

The production site would also create hundreds of direct and indirect jobs. According to Eurocell, their batteries last ten times longer than commonly used lithium-ion batteries. In addition, they would be safer, more durable, and faster to charge.

Now that the battery factory’s foreign adventure has been cancelled, Brink hopes that another major player will consider settling in Drenthe. “We want to keep in touch, including with Eurocell. There is good contact with the Ministry of Economic Affairs and Climate Policy,” he keeps hope alive.

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