Japanese company considering Manitoba for $1.6B lithium ion battery facility
Global News
The company is considering a parcel of city-owned land near the West End Water Pollution Control Centre close to Wilkes Avenue and the Perimeter Highway.
A Japan-based company is eyeing Manitoba as a potential spot to build a $1.6-billion lithium ion battery separator manufacturing facility, sources have told 680 CJOB.
The company is considering a parcel of city-owned land near the West End Water Pollution Control Centre close to Wilkes Avenue and the Perimeter Highway.
A document obtained by 680 CJOB shows that the manufacturing facility would create lithium ion battery separators to support electric vehicle manufacturing in North America.
“Really simplistically, it just prevents electrons from going in the wrong place. You want them to go out in the circuit,” Robert Parsons, an EV expert and a supply chain instructor at the University of Manitoba’s Asper School of Business, said while describing how a lithium ion battery separating facility would work.
“So that’s basically what the purpose of (a lithium ion battery separator) is, it’s a specialized component that is critical in any kind of a lithium ion battery.”
The document also shows expansion of the project will be rolled out in four phases, with a goal of being complete by 2030. The facility would be 1,200 square metres and would employ more than 700 people, the document shows.
Parsons says having a critical component facility like this would be a good fit for the province, but due diligence is still needed.
“There’s a lot of due diligence still to be done. We still have to do that; there’s environmental approvals, there’s due diligence in terms of contract arrangements and any incentives. We still have to to that, that’s never obviated,” Parsons said.