Volkswagen will spend $800 million on electric vehicle plant in US

Expansion will add 1,000 jobs at its existing Chattanooga facility

FILE - In this July 12, 2013, file photo, employees at the Volkswagen plant in Chattanooga, Tenn., work on the assembly of Passat sedans. German automaker Volkswagen said Monday, Jan. 14, 2019, that its factory in Tennessee will be the focus of an $800 million investment in the company��������s manufacturing of electric vehicles in North America. (AP Photo/Erik Schelzig, File)
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Volkswagen said on Monday it was investing $800 million (Dh2.9 trillion) to build a new electric vehicle at its plant in Tennessee, and scheduled a briefing with Ford Motor for Tuesday on their efforts to forge a global alliance.

The German car maker said in an announcement at the Detroit Auto Show that it was adding 1,000 jobs at the Chattanooga plant and that electric vehicle production there would begin in 2022.

Volkswagen chief executive Herbert Diess said the company was considering building luxury Audi vehicles in the United States but that no decisions had been made.

German car manufacturers have been under pressure from US President Donald Trump to increase their investments in the US. Mr Diess and counterparts from German automakers BMW and Daimler met with Mr Trump at the White House in December to urge the administration not to go through with a threat to slap tariffs on European cars.

The Tennessee investment "is a signal to the government that we are really committed to the United States", Mr Diess told reporters at the auto show.

Ford and VW confirmed on Monday they would hold a joint conference call on Tuesday "to provide an update on the companies’ ongoing discussions regarding a global alliance".

Mr Diess and Ford executives ducked questions about how broad their alliance could be, beyond previously disclosed plans to collaborate on commercial vehicles and potentially midsize pickup trucks. Ford and VW have been discussing collaboration on electric and autonomous vehicles.

Both Ford and VW face mounting costs for developing electric and autonomous vehicles. Mr Diess told reporters that VW could shoulder its ambitious $91bn electrification plan on its own but was open to partnerships to increase economies of scale.

VW will use a modular electric toolkit chassis (MEB) in Chattanooga. VW designed MEB to be the basic building block for its EVs and it is intended to consolidate all of the vehicle's electronic controls and reduce the number of microprocessors.

Volkswagen is building the first dedicated EV production facility in Zwickau, Germany, starting MEB production by the end of 2019.

The company will add EV production at facilities in Anting and Foshan, in China, in 2020, and in the German cities of Emden and Hanover by 2022.

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"We obviously think electric vehicles are going to play a more and more prominent role," said Tennessee Governor Bill Haslam, who took part in the announcement.

The first VW EV will be imported and arrive in 2020 and be a series-production version of a concept SUV EV shown last year in Detroit. VW said the vehicle would have the interior space of a midsize sport utility vehicle in the footprint of a compact SUV.

VW Group plans to commit almost $50bn through 2023 toward the development and production of electric vehicles and digital services. The VW brand plans to sell 150,000 EVs by 2020 worldwide, increasing that number to 1 million by 2025.

As part of VW's more than $25bn diesel emissions cheating settlement, it agreed to introduce three additional battery electric vehicle models, including the currently available e-Golf or its successor or replacement models through 2019.

Other car makers at the Detroit show are touting their EV efforts. General Motors showed off a rendering of a Cadillac EV after it confirmed that Cadillac would be the automaker's lead electric vehicle brand.