Ineos, the company founded and run by the British billionaire Sir Jim Ratcliffe, will build an electric version of its new Grenadier off-road vehicle in Austria.
The electric version of the 4x4 will be developed with the Canadian car parts manufacturer Magna and production is scheduled to start in 2026.
The decision means that the UK has missed out on building a second Ineos vehicle, after Ratcliffe, a vocal Brexit backer who is resident in Monaco for tax purposes, chose a French factory for the original Grenadier.
It came as AMTE Power, a small producer of lithium ion batteries, separately said it was considering building its first factory capable of production at the scale of gigawatt hours a year in the US, rather than in Dundee as previously planned. The company is considering shifting manufacturing from the UK to the US to benefit from American subsidies under the Inflation Reduction Act, it told Sky News.
The AMTE Power chief executive, Alan Hollis, said: “Unless we make the UK a competitive place for battery manufacturers, we probably won’t end up with a battery manufacturing industry in the UK.”
Ratcliffe built Ineos into one of the UK’s biggest private companies by taking over chemicals businesses, but he has since used its financial heft to branch out into a series of unrelated businesses ranging from sports clubs to clothing, as well as the manufacture of the Grenadier.
The businessman, whose fortune is worth £6bn according to the Sunday Times, has put in a bid to take over Manchester United football club. His existing sports clubs include the French football club Nice, the Ineos Britannia sailing team and the former Team Sky cycling team, renamed the Ineos Grenadiers to promote the off-roader.
The first deliveries
Read more on theguardian.com