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Manufacturing

º£½ÇÊÓÆµ needs 'series of gigafactories' to maintain the country's car production

Report from SMMT comes as plans for battery plants in Northumberland, Sunderland and Coventry are progressing

Workers making electric vehicles(Image: Getty Images)

The º£½ÇÊÓÆµ needs a series of factories producing electric car batteries to secure the future of the country’s automotive industry, a new report says.

The study commissioned by the Society of Motor Manufacturers and Traders (SMMT) has called on the Government to announce a “binding target” of 60 gigawatt hours of battery capacity to be in place by 2030.

Plans for gigafactories in Northumberland and Coventry have been announced in recent weeks, while Nissan is this week set to announce a major expansion of battery production around its Sunderland plant.

The SMMT report says gigafactories would give º£½ÇÊÓÆµ manufacturers the capability to build up to one million electric cars a year and ensure tariff-free access to “critical” markets in the European Union.

The study, written by policy and research company Public First, also called for the installation of at least 2.3m charging points nationwide before the end of the decade.

This is aimed at giving confidence to drivers – particularly those with no off-road parking at home – to invest in zero-emission vehicles.

The report urged the Government to launch a Build Back Better Fund to support the transformation of the car industry.

There is the potential for 40,000 new, well-paid and high-skilled jobs to be created in the “best-case scenario” of a successful transition to a zero-emissions future combined with “ambitious global trading terms”, the study concluded.