Labour’s Electric Vehicle plan will power £30bn in growth, as party warns Britain ‘losing the race’ under the Conservatives
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Labour plan to back electric vehicle manufacturing with 8 new
battery plants will support £30bn in growth in the UK and power
over 1.8m cars, the party has said. On a visit today (Thursday
9th March) to Warwick Manufacturing Group, which invests in
skills and innovation in the EV industry, the party will call on
the Conservatives to back Labour’s plan on gigafactories and
charging infrastructure, as the United States and Europe surge
ahead with investment to secure...Request free trial
Labour plan to back electric vehicle manufacturing with 8 new battery plants will support £30bn in growth in the UK and power over 1.8m cars, the party has said. On a visit today (Thursday 9th March) to Warwick Manufacturing Group, which invests in skills and innovation in the EV industry, the party will call on the Conservatives to back Labour’s plan on gigafactories and charging infrastructure, as the United States and Europe surge ahead with investment to secure the jobs of the future. Louise Haigh, Ed Miliband and Jonathan Reynolds - Labour’s Transport, Net Zero and Business chiefs - will warn that, under the Conservatives, the UK risks “losing the race to build the electric vehicle revolution here in Britain” as leading manufacturer, JLR, reportedly warn they may locate battery production in Spain without support for capacity in the UK and the Chief Executive of Make UK warned that due to government’s lack of strategy the industry “is in the last chance saloon”.
To support the manufacturing of electric vehicles and £30bn of growth Labour will: · £2bn to part-finance the creation of eight new, additional gigafactories in the West Midlands, the North East, the North West, and the South West as part of the party’s ambitious Green Prosperity Pledge. · Accelerate the roll-out of public charging points to make it easier to own an electric car wherever you live, with binding targets. · Make the UK a clean-energy superpower by 2030 with net-zero carbon electricity, lowering UK electricity costs - a key barrier to UK car industry competitiveness. Shadow Transport Secretary, Louise Haigh MP commenting ahead of the visit, said: “Our world-class car industry can lead the way, but under the Conservative’s we are losing the race to build the electric vehicle revolution here in Britain.” “Labour will turbocharge electric vehicle manufacturing and bring good jobs back to Britain’s industrial heartlands.” “We will invest in eight new battery plants, and lower sky-high electric costs hampering British industry with our plans for zero-carbon power. And we will accelerate the roll-out of charging points, to give motorists confidence to make the switch.” “Labour’s vision is clear – instead of shipping jobs overseas as we have done for decades, we want to win the race for the industries of the future, and create good jobs here in Britain." Notes: UK falling behind on battery capacity:
And on the EV charging roll-out:
Labour’s plan to back Britain’s electric vehicle industry:
Labour’s support for part-financing for up to eight Gigactories will create up to £30bn in value by 2040:
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