US lawmaker scrutinizes Ford plan to produce batteries with technology from CATL

WASHINGTON, Jan 28 (Reuters) – The Republican chair of a ​U.S. House committee is ‌scrutinizing Ford’s plan to repurpose its ‌existing U.S. battery manufacturing facilities to produce lithium iron phosphate cells and grid-scale energy ⁠storage systems ‌using technology licensed from China’s CATL.

In a ‍letter to Ford CEO Jim Farley, Representative John Moolenaar said Ford’s ​plan raises concerns. “Ford’s revised ‌business plan raises important questions about whether the original licensing terms have been updated, expanded, or otherwise altered to ⁠accommodate the company’s ​new focus on ​energy storage systems and data center markets,” Moolenaar ‍wrote, asking ⁠Ford to answer a series of questions about the ⁠arrangement with CATL.

(Reporting by David ‌Shepardson in Washington; Editing ‌by Chris Reese)

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