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US Govt Confirms Tesla and LG Energy Solution's $4.3B Battery Deal

WASHINGTON, March 16 (Reuters) - The U.S. government on Monday said electric vehicle maker Tesla and South Korea's LG ​Energy Solution had signed a supply agreement to ‌build a $4.3 billion lithium iron phosphate (LFP) prismatic battery cell manufacturing facility in Lansing, Michigan, with an expected production launch in 2027.

"American-made ​cells will power Tesla's Megapack 3 energy ​storage systems produced in Houston, creating a robust ⁠domestic battery supply chain," the U.S. Department of the ​Interior said in a statement on Monday.

The agreement was part ​of a broader statement on deals highlighted by President Donald Trump's administration from the Indo-Pacific Energy Security Summit.

A source told Reuters ​in July that LG Energy Solution had signed ​a $4.3 billion deal to supply Tesla with energy storage system ‌batteries ⁠as the U.S. company looked to reduce its reliance on Chinese imports due to tariffs.

At the time, the South Korean company said it had signed a $4.3 ​billion contract ​to supply ⁠LFP batteries over three years globally, without identifying the customer or saying if ​they would be used in vehicles or ​energy-storage ⁠systems.

LG Energy Solution is one of the few producers of LFP batteries in the U.S. The LFP ⁠battery ​chemistry has long been dominated ​by Chinese rivals that have little presence in the U.S. market.

Reporting ​by Kanishka Singh in Washington; Editing by Thomas Derpinghaus

Source: Reuters


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