VinFast EV production in U.S. now not expected to start until 2025

VinFast’s bold ambitions to sell electric cars to consumers in the U.S. have suffered another setback with production at its as-yet-unbuilt facility in North Carolina now not expected to start until 2025.

The Vietnamese company had most recently said it planned to start trial production at the plant by 2024. Earlier this week a company spokesperson said VinFast had “received the air permit and we are preparing for subcontractors bidding and will start the construction soon.”

VinFast LLC's VF8 electric vehicles bound for shipment at a port in Haiphong, Vietnam, on Friday, Nov. 25, 2022.

An updated filing for VinFast’s planned U.S. initial public offering released Friday however said that commissioning of the facility is targeted for 2025.

“Preconstruction work for phase one commenced in the third quarter of 2022, with commissioning targeted for 2025,” the filing said. “Phase one of the facility is expected to have an initial capacity of 150,000 vehicles a year” rising to 250,000 cars upon completion of phase two.

Tesla’s factory in China, by way of comparison, pumps out around 70,000 cars a month.

The Vinfast VF8 features 207 mile range and is available only to California residents.

VinFast said to Bloomberg News that the delay was because “we need more time to complete administrative procedures.”

That delayed timeline also means VinFast won’t be able to take advantage of tax credits provided for under President Joe Biden’s Inflation Reduction Act. The IRA EV tax credits are only eligible for electric cars that are made in the U.S. Currently, VinFast is making its electric cars at a factory north of Hanoi and putting them on a ship.

“If purchases of our EVs are not able to qualify for tax credits under the IRA, demand for our EVs may decrease,” VinFast said in the filing.

VinFast’s latest pre-IPO filing also showed the company lost $2.1 billion in the 12 months ended Dec. 31 versus around $800 million in 2020 and a deficit of $1.4 billion in 2021. Revenue last year from vehicle sales was just $525 million, down from about $586 million in 2021.

VinFast is part of Vingroup JSC, owned by billionaire Pham Nhat Vuong, who has a net worth of around $4.1 billion.

As of the end of last year, Vingroup, its affiliates and external lenders had pumped about $8.2 billion into VinFast. Vuong has no plans as yet to personally invest any more money in VinFast, the carmaker’s Chief Executive Officer Le Thi Thu Thuy said in February.