After breaking ground in 2023, the company building a plant to produce battery components for electric vehicles in a municipality near Kingston, Ont., says it’s delaying construction of the plant citing a slowdown in EV sales.
In a statement to CBC News, Umicore Rechargeable Battery Materials Inc. said Friday that its project in Loyalist Township is impacted by the “significant worsening of the EV market context and the impacts this has on the entire supply chain.”
The project carried a total price tag of up to $2.76 billion back in 2023. According to a news release at the time from Innovation, Science and Economic Development Canada, the federal government was slated to invest up to $551.3 million.
The province was to pay up to $424.6 million, but the Ontario Minister of Economic Development, Job Creation and Trade Vic Fedeli said in a statement Friday that “as of today, no provincial money has flowed to Umicore.”
Umicore cited a situation on June 12 when it announced that a contract with a Chinese manufacturer would not materialize. The company said its legacy contracts were tailing off faster than anticipated and there’s a delay in the “ramp-up of contracts” in Europe.
“For Umicore, customers’ demand projections for our battery materials have steeply declined recently,” the statement reads.
Umicore said it’s realigning its operations “to the new market reality,” adding that a part of accomplishing this involves a “thorough review” of its battery materials business.
Umicore says it’s planning to present the conclusion of that review on its capital markets day during the first quarter of 2025.