º£½ÇÊÓÆµ

Oops.

Our website is temporarily unavailable in your location.

We are working hard to get it back online.

PRIVACY
Manufacturing

Recharge Industries insists Britishvolt deal still on track despite MP's concern

There has been wrangling about a buy-back clause over the land

The site in Blyth, Northumberland, where Britishvolt had plans to build a gigafactory.(Image: PA)

The company aiming to revive the Britishvolt plans to bring a huge gigafactory to Northumberland insist the project is still on track despite an MP raising concerns.

Recharge Industries, which acquired the failed start-up for £8.6m in March, has played down concerns that it has yet to complete the deal owing to negotiations about a buy back clause Northumberland County Council has over the land in the event a battery plant is not built there. Earlier this week, Wansbeck MP Ian Lavery, whose constituency includes the 95-hectare site in Cambois, asked Business and Trade Minister Nusrat Ghani to intervene to avoid a breakdown on the deal.

Mr Lavery told a debate on the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ car industry that Recharge was committed to the job-creating site but added: "However, there is a huge issue with Northumberland County Council relating to a buyback proposal on the land of the proposed gigafactory. Will the Minister please intervene to facilitate discussions between all parties to ensure that we are not let down again at the site in Cambois, and that Recharge Industries gets every support it needs from the Government to build that gigafactory and bring 9,000 jobs to the North East?

Read more: Government told to "wake up and take the steering wheel" on electric vehicles

In response, Ms Ghani said her department continued to "work closely" with the local authority in order to secure the best outcome for the site but that central Government was not the deciding party. She also promised to meet with Mr Lavery.

When asked about working with the council in a recent interview in the Australian Financial Review, David Collard, the entrepreneur behind Recharge Industries referred to the authority as having "a number of cooks in the kitchen". Recharge has now issued a statement saying that has developed a "great working relationship" with the council and added that the project is progressing.

A spokesperson said: “We’ve developed a great working relationship with the council in a short space of time and share a joint vision for the huge benefits a gigafactory could bring to Northumberland and the wider North East. The Council has been good to its word to ‘bend over backwards’ in helping us to deliver a gigafactory project on the site and the thousands of jobs it will secure.

"Recharge Industries continues to work collaboratively with the NCC and Grant Thornton has been appointed by the Council to review the valuation of the buy back and provide recommendations to them."