UK鈥檚 Motor City hopes Labour can jumpstart EV dream

MORE THAN three years have passed since Coventry unveiled plans for a giant electric-car battery factory at its small airport in England鈥檚 West Midlands, offering hope that the UK could catch up with rival countries already years ahead in cell production.
But with no major customer or investor, the project has yet to get off the ground, making hollow its target to produce batteries by 2025. Its struggles are emblematic of why the UK鈥檚 car industry is foundering.
The upcoming general election could provide a boost. The Labour Party, which is leading in polls, plans to restore a 2030 ban on new petrol and diesel car sales 鈥 a move that may finally help the site attract investors put off by mixed messages from the government and the broader electric vehicle (EV) slowdown.
鈥淭hat will change the dynamic,鈥 Richard Moore, a former auto executive who鈥檚 spearheading the project, said in an interview at the UK Battery Industrialization Centre next to the airport. The current Conservative government has no clear strategy, leaving potential investors wondering how they would access any state support, Mr. Moore said.
The auto industry has been crying out for change since the Conservatives came to power in 2010, presaging a steady decline in car manufacturing. Executives鈥 biggest complaint is mixed signals from government, noting that Brexit sowed confusion about trade. The decision to push back the ban on new petrol and diesel car sales by five years created more uncertainty about the country鈥檚 commitment to EVs.
鈥淭hey鈥檝e probably done more damage to the UK car industry than any other administration, on both sides, in the past 50 years,鈥 said Andy Palmer, the former chief executive officer of Aston Martin Lagonda Global Holdings Plc and current chairman of EV charging company Pod Point Group Holdings Plc. 鈥淭he world鈥檚 car companies are confused in terms of what to expect from the UK. That鈥檚 broken one of the major merits of investments in the UK, which is it鈥檚 understandable and predictable.鈥
LAGGING INVESTMENT
Once the world鈥檚 second-largest car manufacturing hub in the 1950s, the UK has dropped to 18th as of last year, according to the International Organization of Motor Vehicle Manufacturers. The country鈥檚 efforts to become an early adopter of electric vehicles has stalled, with only one in six new cars registered last year being battery-electric 鈥 in line with the year before.
The UK isn鈥檛 alone with regard to battery disappointment. Production plans have sputtered across Europe, where countries are struggling to compete with lucrative financial incentives in the US and the stranglehold China has on cell manufacturing.
鈥淭he very first question any government coming in has got to ask is: Do we want to stay in the car business?鈥 Mr. Palmer said. 鈥淏ecause ultimately, if you want to stay in the car business, you鈥檝e got to make a lot of investment.鈥
Last year, the Conservative government committed 拢2 billion ($2.5 billion) to the EV transition, though it also has vowed to reverse an expansion of London鈥檚 Ultra-Low Emission Zone that penalizes older, more polluting vehicles.
Labour has pledged 拢1.5 billion toward new cell factories and committed to a battery-health standard that it says will support the second-hand market for EVs.
EMISSIONS POLITICS
Both main parties have promised to fix potholes and roll out EV charging infrastructure, but neither has committed to financial incentives to encourage consumers to buy EVs.
Labour also plans to stick with the zero-emission vehicle mandate introduced by the Conservative government earlier this year. This requires at least 22% of cars sold to be fully electric this year, rising to 80% by 2030. Carmakers face fines of up to 拢15,000 per vehicle for missing the targets.
Stellantis NV鈥檚 UK boss Maria Grazia Davino last week threatened to close van factories in northwest England鈥檚 Ellesmere Port and Luton, near London, if the government doesn鈥檛 ease targets or introduce consumer incentives. The maker of Peugeot and Vauxhall vehicles employs 2,500 people across the two facilities.
Government investment will be key to enticing the sort of foreign investors that Mr. Moore wants in Coventry. The area formerly known as the UK鈥檚 Motor City is still home to Jaguar Land Rover Automotive Plc, Britain鈥檚 biggest carmaker.
In a blow to the Coventry project, JLR鈥檚 owner, India鈥檚 Tata Motors Ltd., decided last year to build a 拢4-billion battery factory in Somerset, with the help of taxpayer support. The government also offered aid to get Nissan Motor Co. to make electric successors to its Qashqai and Juke models in Sunderland.
The UK is still lagging rival countries when it comes to battery manufacturing capacity, with only one operational factory run by Envision鈥檚 AESC in Sunderland for Nissan, producing less than 2 gigawatt hours of battery capacity a year. For the automotive industry alone, the UK will require at least 100 GWh a year by the end of the decade, according to a 2022 report from the Faraday Institution. The collapse last year of battery startup Britishvolt Ltd. cast a shadow over the sector.
鈥淣o one鈥檚 going to take us seriously鈥 until the UK can produce at least 20 GWh a year, said Mr. Moore, whose site has planning permission for up to 60 GWh, enough to power 600,000 EVs.
Jim O鈥橞oyle, a Labour councilor for Coventry who used to work at a car factory, blames the government for the lack of progress on the project.
鈥淭he frustration has been clear here because they just don鈥檛 seem to see it as that important,鈥 Mr. O鈥橞oyle said. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 think they鈥檝e understood what the potential benefits are here, never mind what the potential risk is here.鈥 鈥 Bloomberg News


