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Volkswagen to open its first North American EV battery plant in St. Thomas, Ont.

The Ontario government has announced a landmark deal that would bring a Volkswagen electric vehicle battery plant to St. Thomas along with new jobs in manufacturing. It's the first public confirmation of a deal that has long been rumoured to be in the works.

The deal has been in the works since April 2022, according to government officials

ford and a guy
Premier Doug Ford, right, meets with Sebastian Wolf, chief operating officer of PowerCo SE, on Feb 23. Batteries at the EV plant planned for St. Thomas, Ont., would be manufactured by PowerCo. (Government of Ontario)

The Ontario government has announced Volkswagen's firstelectric vehicle (EV) battery manufacturing plant will be builtin St. Thomas,in the area of Talbot Line and Yarmouth Centre Road, near the city's airport.

The announcement, released Mondayby the office of Vic Fedeli, the province's minister of economic development and trade, is the first public confirmation of the deal that has long been rumoured to be in the works.

The German auto giant said production is set to begin in 2027, calling it its first overseas "gigafactory" for battery cell manufacturing.

"I think that means a very large plant with a very large workforce," said St Thomas Mayor Joe Preston on Monday. "We're already clearing the land and getting things ready for as fast as a construction that we can do."

Preston said the plant will likely result in thousands of jobs, at the plant itself, along the supply chain and during the plant's construction, which is expected to take two to four years.

"In the long run, it's maybe more than we can dream. It's that good for St Thomas."

Flavio Volpe, head of the Automotive Parts Manufacturers'Association (APMA), said the new plant could result in "as many as 2,500 direct jobscreatedand up to 7,500 total jobs including indirect positions."

The province recently passed legislation that would allow the City of St. Thomas to annex 607 hectares of farmland from the Municipality of Central Elgin. The aim is to turn the parcelinto industrial lands as part of what the province called an investment "mega-site."

Neighbours were upset by the legislation, which they said was done in secret and without their consultation.

Preston said it's typical for governments to keep real estate deals confidential until they're a fait accompli.

"Obviously any negotiation on property or land purchases needs to be done quietly. We certainly don't put up billboards about it," he said.

Volkswagen officials met with Premier Doug Ford on Feb 23, according to a provincial news release to seal the deal.

Batteries at the plant, once built, would be manufactured by PowerCo, a Volkswagen subsidiaryin its first overseas battery manufacturing plant.

'A vote of confidence' for Ontario manufacturing

Brendan Sweeney is managing director of the Trillium Network for Advanced Manufacturing at Western University in London, Ont.

Sweeney said the new EV battery manufacturing plant "really is a vote of confidence in Ontario as a location for manufacturing and particularly southwestern Ontario, especially given that this is not an incumbent manufacturer making a new investmentthis is a manufacturer that is quite new to Canada."

Sweeney said that by the time the plant is built, it will likely feed at least three other EV manufacturing plants in North America, including a yet-to-be-built EV plantin the Carolinas and a not-yet announced Audi plant, the location of which is still to be determined.

A blue pickup truck on a stage with the word Stellantis behind it.
The Ram 1500 Revolution electric battery-powered pickup truck is displayed during the Stellantis keynote at the CES tech show Jan. 5 in Las Vegas. (John Locher/The Associated Press)

Given all that, Sweeney said, the plant could be as big, if notbigger, than the recently announced Stellantis EV battery plant in Windsor, which will employ 2,500 workers.

"This could be as big or bigger," he said. "It's very exciting."

Sweeney said the announcement means St.Thomas will likely see a large amount of growth in the form of new housing andmore suppliers in order to serve the new plant.

He said part of the reason Volkswagen may have chosen the St. Thomas siteis because of recent layoffs at the CAMIAssembly plant in Ingersolland the Broseauto-parts manufacturing plant in London, as well as the recent closure of the Johnson Controls International plant in Tillsonburg.

"That, in an odd way, is likely one of the reasons this [Volkswagen EV] plant landed where it did. There's an available workforce that knows the auto industry very well.

"Those layoffs, in such a tight labour market, might have made Volkswagen say, 'Oh, there's people available,'" Sweeneysaid. "The quality of the workforce in the region is probably a big draw."

Provincial officialsand company officials from Volkswagen were not immediately available for comment Monday.

With files from The Canadian Press