Stellantis, Canadian government in dispute over battery plant commitments

Stellantis and the Canadian government are in a dispute over support for the company's planned electric vehicle battery plant in Windsor, Ontario. Unifor, the union representing Canadian autoworkers, is pressing for a resolution.

Unifor, the union representing Canadian autoworkers, is pressing for swift government action after Jeep- and Chrysler-parent Stellantis said it had halted construction at an electric vehicle battery plant in Windsor over a dispute related to subsidies for the almost $4 billion project.

Unifor National President Lana Payne painted the situation in stark terms in a news release Monday.

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“It’s outrageous that tens of thousands of jobs are in jeopardy due to a failure to come to terms on government investment. The situation is as serious as it gets. This needs to be resolved immediately to preserve workers’ livelihoods and construction of the EV plant can resume,” Payne said in the release.

The union said that “companies like Stellantis don’t make threats, they make decisions” and that “once those decisions get to a certain point … they are very hard to reverse.”

Stellantis, which also owns the Ram, Dodge and Fiat brands, provided a statement, saying that the Canadian government “has not delivered on what was agreed to” and that Stellantis and its partner in the project, LG Energy Solution, would implement “contingency plans,” without elaborating. The statement said all construction related to battery module production at the site had stopped.

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It wasn’t clear what specific financial commitment that the Canadian government was accused of failing to meet. A message seeking comment was sent to the office of Prime Minister Justin Trudeau.

Laurie Bouchard, a spokesperson for Francois-Philippe Champagne, Canada’s minister of Innovation, Science and Industry, provided a statement on the situation, indicating that negotiations are ongoing: