Toyota Motor Corp. said on Wednesday it would invest up to 730 billion yen ($5.27 billion) in Japan and the United States to make batteries for fully electric vehicles.
When the additional facilities come on line between 2024 and 2026, Toyota’s battery production capacity in the two countries will have increased by 40 gigawatt-hours, the company said, giving no current figure for comparison.
“This investment is aimed at enabling Toyota to flexibly meet the needs of its various customers in all countries and regions by offering multiple powertrains and providing as many options as possible,” it said in a statement.
Toyota is the latest in string of companies announcing big battery investment in the United States, where a shift towards fully electric automobiles could accelerate as the the Biden administration discourages use of gasoline and diesel vehicles and tightens eligibility for tax credits.
Major rival Honda Motor Co. said on Monday it and Korean battery supplier LG Energy Solution Ltd. would build a $4.4 billion lithium-ion battery plant for electric vehicles in the United States.
In its Wednesday statement, Toyota said it would invest about 400 billion yen in Japan. That money would go into two of its own plants, one owned by its joint venture with Panasonic Holdings Corp.—Prime Planet Energy & Solutions Co.—and a third that is being built for another joint company with Panasonic.
In addition, about 325 billion yen would be invested in Toyota Battery Manufacturing in North Carolina.
Automakers worldwide are spending billions of dollars to ramp up battery and electric vehicle production in the face of tougher environmental regulations.
President Joe Biden signed a $430 billion climate, health care, and tax bill this month that would render electric vehicles assembled outside North America ineligible for tax credits.
California announced a plan last week to ban sales of new cars powered only by internal combustion engines by 2035.
Toyota last year committed 8 trillion yen to electrify its car model range by 2030, with half of that slated to develop fully electric vehicles. Still, it expects annual sales of such cars to reach only 3.5 million units by the end of the decade, around a third of its current total volume.
In June, Toyota said it had recalled more than 2,000 of its first mass-produced electric vehicle, the bZ4X SUV, less than two months after unveiling the model, because of a risk the wheel could come loose.
($1=138.43 yen)