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Manufacturing

Britishvolt outlines supplier cluster plans and huge interest in jobs at forthcoming gigafactory

The battery firm has plans to attracts scores of component manufacturers to a park near its £3.8bn gigafactory site

CGIs of Britishvolt factory in Northumberland(Image: handout from Britishvolt)

Bosses at battery start-up Britishvolt have spoken about plans to attract international component manufacturers to a supplier park near the site of its forthcoming Northumberland gigafactory.

Peter Rolton, executive chairman at Britishvolt, told Business Live there was already interest from companies that will produce the parts needed for its batteries that will power the next generation of electric vehicles. Those firms would occupy 200 hectares, adjacent to the 93-hectare former Blyth Power Station coal yards site where Britishvolt is developing the 3,000-job plant.

The ambition means making that part of Northumberland competitive against other European sites where suppliers could choose to locate - a task Britishvolt is investigating with Advance Northumberland. Mr Rolton, whose own engineering consultancy has moved into nearby offices, said: "Our vision for this is not only the factory but all the principle component manufacturers, so you'll have the complete battery eco-system. The º£½ÇÊÓÆµ Government wants that because they don't want a replication of the semiconductor situation which has killed car production.

Read more: Chamber and automotive group tasked to develop North East skills plans

"We've got a nice long list of people who are interested. The grid connection here is a significant reason as to why we're here. The battery manufacturing process uses a lot of electricity - about 10 times that of an equivalent car factory. The availability of that power, along with the port and rail makes this the best gigafactory site in the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ. There's nowhere that comes close to this combination of infrastructure."

He added: "We've brought out own grid connection off the primary one here, with our own substation, which will then all be renewable energy. Because it's a private grid, that energy is cheaper because you lose a lot of non-commodity charges. Currently we have an application with the Secretary of State for an exemption on some of those commodity charges to make the power even cheaper.

"That's really important because when you look at our cost of production and of the component manufacturers they're looking at European location decisions - not º£½ÇÊÓÆµ ones. You've got to get your infrastructure and competitiveness aligned."

Meanwhile, there has been significant interest in some of the 3,000 jobs touted by Britishvolt at the Cambois site. The firm says it has been inundated at early recruitment fairs where parents have brought along school children along to find out more about the opportunities.