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Manufacturing

Britishvolt: how a start-up found £1.7bn to make gigafactory vision a reality

Plans for the 3,000-job plant in Northumberland got to go-ahead last week when Government and private funding were secured

Undated artist impression issued by Britishvolt of their first full scale º£½ÇÊÓÆµ battery gigaplant in Northumberland. (Image: PA)


When journalists were first invited to visit the site of the proposed Britishvolt factory in Northumberland, the only thing to see was a deer gambolling in the middle-distance.

The plot - not quite the former Blyth Power Station site, as was first reported, but the site of its former coal yards - stretches as far as the eye can see but currently contains a whole lot of nothing other than the odd shrub and the occasional bit of wandering wildlife.

Within the next few weeks, however, the site will become one of the largest construction sites the region has seen in recent years after multimillion-pound Government funding helped the electric battery firm secure private investment of £1.7bn to build a 3,000-job gigafactory there.

Read more: go here for more stories on the Climate Agenda

With another 5,000 jobs potentially in the supply chain, the development will be the largest single piece of job creation in the North East since Nissan set up in the region in the 1980s. It also puts the region at the forefront of the green industrial revolution, joining Nissan’s battery partners Envision AESC in giving the North East the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ’s first two gigafactories making batteries for electric vehicles.

When Britishvolt’s plans were first announced at the end of 2020 there was understandably some skepticism. The company was at that point only a year old and its description by one national newspaper as a company with ‘no customers and no product’ was not entirely unfair.

What it did have, however, was the site generally regarded as the country’s best location for a battery factory at exactly the moment at which such plants became crucial to the future of the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ automotive industry. Sometimes, timing is everything.

The Journal had first reported on the project to make the former power station site into the Energy Central as far back as 2016, and years of work by Advance Northumberland to reclaim that land was crucial to last week’s successful Britishvolt announcement.