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Economic Development

Somerset gigafactory will be 'catalyst' for attracting major overseas firms to Britain

The vast Tata-owned plant is being built near Bridgwater and will manufacture electric vehicle batteries for companies including JLR

A mock up of what the gigafactory in Somerset will look like(Image: Agratas)

A multi-billion-pound Somerset gigafactory could be a “catalyst” for attracting major international companies to Britain, according to the boss of the smart campus where it's being built.

Agratas, part of Indian conglomerate Tata, is currently building its £4bn electric vehicle battery plant near Bridgwater and has said around 4,000 jobs could be created in the region as a result. The company’s choice of location is a site near the M5 that is larger than Monaco.

The 616-acre Gravity smart campus was once home to a factory that manufactured munitions during the Second World War and was later owned by BAE Systems. In 2017, it was sold to global investment firm Salamanca Group which is focused on turning the site into a hub for cleantech businesses.

Gravity pitches itself as a “trailblazing place” for international companies in Britain that will transform the economy and create 7,500 jobs.

“Our vision is to deliver the largest innovation campus in the country,” said Martin Bellamy, chief executive of Salamanca Group. “What [Agratas] will bring is a level of economic prosperity.”

Agratas announced last year it had bought 308 acres within Gravity for its planned factory, which is expected to start production in 2026. The deal with the Mumbai-based battery maker took two years to close and was a major coup for the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ, which failed to attract Elon Musk's Tesla post-Brexit.

Somerset County Council leader Bill Revans, Martin Bellamy CEO of Gravity and Matt Tudor from Bridgwater & Taunton College(Image: Mid Somerset Series)

Salamanca Group was engaged in “brush past” discussions with Tesla in 2019-2020, according to Bellamy, before Musk's firm selected Germany for its European base. The group also spent 18 months in talks with electric carmaker Rivian but, in the end, the US company “shelved” its plans.

“I think it is a challenge for any country [to attract big companies like Agratas],” said Bellamy. “The amount of work that goes into getting a site into the right condition is difficult - power, planning infrastructure. These sites don’t sit on the shelf. This was probably the only site in the country that was construction ready, of this scale, with the appropriate amount of power and transport connectivity.”