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South Korean battery makers agree last-minute deal in boost to Biden's EV policy

Time:12 Apr,2021
<p style="text-align: center;"><img title="1618196938841529.jpg" alt="6.jpg" src="/ueditor/php/upload/image/20210412/1618196938841529.jpg"/></p><p>South Korean battery makers&nbsp;LG Chem&nbsp;and rival&nbsp;SK Innovation&nbsp;Co have agreed to settle a trade secrets dispute that has threatened a key Georgia plant and the electric vehicle plans of&nbsp;Ford&nbsp;Motor Co and&nbsp;Volkswagen&nbsp;AG, three sources briefed on the matter said.<br/><br/>The Biden administration through the U.S. Trade Representative&#39;s Office (USTR) faced a Sunday night deadline on whether to take the rare step of reversing a U.S. International Trade Commission decision unless the companies had agreed on a deal. An announcement of the battery makers&#39; settlement is expected by Sunday, the sources said.<br/><br/>The agreement is a win for President&nbsp;Joe Biden&nbsp;who has made boosting electric vehicles and U.S. battery production a top priority. The&nbsp;global auto industry&nbsp;is racing to develop EVs, and Biden has proposed spending $174 billion to hike EV sales and expand charging infrastructure.<br/><br/>The accord puts an end to a bitter two-year dispute between affiliates of two of South Korea&#39;s biggest conglomerates. After losing out to SK in its bid to win Volkswagen orders, LG accused SK of stealing trade secrets by poaching nearly 80 of its employees.<br/><br/>The ITC in February sided with LG Chem after the company accused SK of misappropriating trade secrets related to&nbsp;EV battery&nbsp;technology and issued a 10-year-import ban, but it allowed SK to import components for batteries for Ford&#39;s EV F-150 program for four years, and Volkswagen&#39;s North American EVs for two years.<br/><br/>SK vowed to walk away from its $2.6 billion Georgia battery plant under construction if the ITC decision was not overturned.<br/><br/>The ITC also faulted what it called SK&#39;s &quot;egregious misconduct&quot; and SK&#39;s destruction of documents ordered by company executives.<br/><br/>Ford, VW, LG and SK declined to comment.<br/><br/>Volkswagen of America CEO Scott Keogh wrote in a LinkedIn post on Wednesday that if the ITC decision were left in place, it could &quot;reduce U.S. battery capacity and delay the transition to electric vehicles.&quot;<br/><br/>LG first filed a complaint against SK in 2019 and both sides hired numerous lawyers and consultants to make their case to the Biden administration.<br/><br/>The administration has been pushing the two companies to try to reach a settlement, as have VW and Ford, the sources said.<br/><br/>U.S. Trade Representative Katherine Tai has been personally involved in the settlement discussions and urged both companies to come to a resolution, sources said. USTR declined to comment.<br/><br/>SK in March received proposed terms from LG, including financial reparations to address LG&#39;s trade secrets misappropriation claims, Reuters reported earlier citing a person familiar with the situation.<br/><br/>Georgia is home to two newly-elected Democratic U.S. Senators, Raphael Warnock and Jon Ossoff, who are a linchpin of Biden&#39;s slim Congressional majority and have both spoken about the importance of ensuring the Georgia plant&#39;s future.<br/><br/>Both senators repeatedly pressed the companies to reach an agreement.<br/><br/>Warnock praised the reported deal that will ensure the Georgia plant&#39;s survival, saying in a statement on Saturday that it &quot;will help keep the local economy moving forward.&quot;<br/><br/>Last month, Georgia&#39;s Republican Governor Brian Kemp urged Biden to intervene, noting SK&#39;s plant will employ nearly 2,600 and is the largest foreign investment in the state&#39;s history: &quot;Simply put: the livelihoods of thousands of Georgians are now in your hands.&quot;<br/><br/>LG&#39;s battery unit LG Energy Solution is nearing completion of an Ohio cell manufacturing plant with General Motors and is close to announcing plans to build a $2.3 billion second facility in Tennessee, sources told Reuters.<br/><br/>LG has said it can handle the battery needs of automakers if SK abandons its Georgia plant.<br/><br/>SK has said LG could not handle the VW and Ford contracts, and that Chinese manufacturers could step in to meet demand.<br/><br/>Bloomberg reported the expected deal earlier on Saturday.</p>
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