In This Article:
* Battery maker completes $1 bln equity capital raise
* Capital raise led by Volkswagen and Goldman Sachs
* BMW and IKEA-linked foundation also among investors
* Funding round enables establishment of Skelleftea gigafactory (Adds Northvolt CEO interview, detail, background)
By Niklas Pollard and Johannes Hellstrom
STOCKHOLM, June 12 (Reuters) - Automakers Volkswagen and BMW are among the investors in Europe's biggest lithium-ion battery plant, Sweden's Northvolt said on Wednesday after it raised $1 billion in equity capital to complete funding for the facility.
Northvolt said construction of the plant in Skelleftea in northern Sweden would begin in August, to provide an initial 16 GWh of cell manufacturing capacity. It added it had already sold a significant part of planned production volumes at a combined order value of more than $13 billion through 2030.
The plant is one of Sweden's biggest industrial projects in decades and will play an integral part in European efforts to compete with Asian rivals such as CATL, Samsung and LG Chem, which are leaders in the battery market after locking in supply deals with carmakers.
"Today is not only a great milestone for Northvolt, it also marks a key moment for Europe that clearly shows that we are ready to compete in the coming wave of electrification," Northvolt CEO and former Tesla executive Peter Carlsson said.
Carlsson told reporters at Northvolt's headquarters in central Stockholm that production would begin in 2021 at the Skelleftea plant, named "Northvolt Ett" - "Northvolt One" in Swedish - in a nod to Tesla's numerically named Gigafactories in the United States and soon, China.
"From a longer-term perspective, we will be in a constant financing process. If we want to be one of the bigger players in Europe in 2030 we will need to build up towards 150 GWh of capacity," Carlsson said.
Funding for a project set to cost billions of euros, which envisages the Swedish plant eventually reaching a capacity of at least 32 GWh, had been seen as challenging by some investors despite political and business support in the Nordic country.
Those fears have been laid to rest with big European industrial players coming on board along with international and domestic financial investors.
Swedish pension fund firms AMF and Folksam and IKEA-linked IMAS Foundation also contributed to the equity capital raising, which was led by Goldman Sachs and VW, Northvolt said.
The European Investment Bank is among the project's lenders and will provide a 350 million euro loan, its largest ever direct financing of battery technology.