The UK Infrastructure Bank has provided a £200 million loan to support the development of AESC’s gigafactory in the North East of England.
The bridging loan will support the construction of the 15.8GWh gigafactory in Sunderland, which will produce lithium-ion batteries for next-generation EVs manufactured in the UK.
Work on the facility started in 2022 and the project is expected to create and support more than 1,000 jobs once operational.
Domestic battery manufacture is seen as crucial to the success of future UK car production and key for the transition to net zero, with about 200GWh needed by 2040 to meet demand from car manufacturers.
The project supports the Government’s recently published Battery Strategy and aligns strongly with the UK Infrastructure Bank’s core mission to tackle climate change and support local and regional economic growth.
It will be AESC’s second plant in Sunderland, with the existing 1.8GWh facility built in 2012 currently the UK’s only operational gigafactory.
Incorporated and headquartered in Japan, AESC is a developer and manufacturer of high-performance batteries for electric vehicles and energy storage systems.
John Flint, CEO, UK Infrastructure Bank, said, “A domestic battery supply chain will play an important role in the UK’s transition to net zero and also the wider economy, as highlighted in the Government’s recently published Battery Strategy.
“Gigafactories are an essential part of that supply chain. They also have the potential to secure and create thousands of jobs, but serious investment is needed to scale up production.
“This loan signals the Bank’s appetite to play a meaningful role in the financing of the domestic battery supply chain and that we are ready and willing to deploy capital where it is needed for this crucial net zero infrastructure.”