9/24/12, "Obama-Promoted Battery Plant Moves to 'Rolling Furloughs' As Company Pulls Back on Jobs Projections," Michigan Capitol Confidential, Tom Gantert
"LG Chem received $151 million from feds, $100 million from state."
"Two years ago, when President Obama visited the LG Chem battery plant
in Holland, it was hailed as part of the transformation of Michigan to a
“green economy.”
The battery plant, which supplies batteries for the Chevy Volt, got $151 million from the U.S. Department of Energy.
Today, $133 million of that $151 million has been spent, but since
April, the company's 200 workers have been on "rolling furloughs"
because the electric vehicle market has failed to blossom as promised by
many.
In 2010, the plant was projected to create 443 new jobs within five
years. Those projections have been shelved as the company says it can't
predict when the furloughs will stop for its current employees.
"Ultimately, market conditions and demand for lithium-ion batteries
are going to determine when the company is going to be able to launch
production and grow," said LG Chem Spokesman Randy Boileau. "The company
has said the Holland facility will play an important role in its global
strategy for the batteries."
The Holland battery plant was one of two high-profile green projects heavily subsidized by the government that drew presidential attention, but now are struggling.
A123 Systems, which has a lithium-ion battery manufacturing plant in
Livonia, received $249.1 million in federal government money. It laid off employees and its future was in doubt until China recently invested $465 million in the company.
The electric vehicle market in the U.S. has not taken off as some have hoped.
GM has sold 13,497 Chevy Volt s through August this year, or about
.001 percent of the total 9.7 million cars and light trucks sold in the
first nine months of 2012, according to Autodata Corp. GM sold 2,831
Volts in August of 2012, up from 302 sold in August of 2011.
"Michigan and the federal government deemed that electric car
batteries were the future and spent hundreds of millions of tax dollars
trying to make it so," said James Hohman, a fiscal policy analyst with
the Mackinac Center for Public Policy. "Policymakers shouldn't waste
taxpayer dollars on the industry du jour; they should level the playing
field."
The Holland battery plant also was approved for up to $100 million in state tax credits."
.
No comments:
Post a Comment