Advanced Vehicles: US Government Allocates $12 Billion to Support Auto Makers and Suppliers

Advanced Vehicles: US Government Allocates  Billion to Support Auto Makers and Suppliers

WASHINGTON, Aug 31 (Reuters) -‍ The Biden administration is offering $12 billion in grants and ‍loans for auto makers and suppliers to​ retrofit their plants to produce electric and other​ advanced⁤ vehicles, Energy Secretary Jennifer Granholm said on​ Thursday.

“While we‌ transition to EVs, we want to ensure that workers can ⁣transition in place, that ​there is no worker, no community left behind,” ⁣Granholm, a former governor of car-manufacturing state Michigan, told reporters in a call.

Speeding grants and other subsidies ⁢to fund conversion of existing auto plants to build electric vehicles could help the White House blunt criticism ⁣from automakers and the ‍United Auto Workers (UAW) union over proposed environmental rules aimed ⁣to help usher in the EV era.

The UAW has warned that ​a rapid change could put thousands ⁢of jobs at risk in states ⁢such as Michigan, ​Ohio, Illinois ⁤and Indiana.

Last week UAW members voted overwhelmingly in favor of ‍authorizing a strike ‌at the⁣ Detroit Three automakers if an agreement over ‌wages ​and pension plans is not ​reached before the current four-year‍ contract⁣ expires on Sept. 14.

On Thursday UAW President Shawn Fain‍ cheered the announcement, saying the policy “makes⁢ clear to employers that the EV transition must include⁤ strong union partnerships with the ⁣high pay and safety standards that generations of ⁤UAW members ​have fought for⁤ and won.”

President Joe ⁣Biden said in a release that “building a clean ⁢energy economy can and should ⁣provide a ​win-win ‌opportunity for ​auto companies and unionized workers who have ‌anchored the American ‍economy for decades.”

Fain has vowed to save a Jeep factory in Belvidere, Illinois, that Stellantis (STLAM.MI) has put on track to⁢ shutter. The automaker has left open the ‍possibility that the factory ‍could get a new product with government aid.

When asked about the chances that the grants could ​keep that factory‍ open, Granholm said ​plants that had been built​ up‌ around ⁤communities are “prime for taking advantage of these funding opportunities.”

There will be no specific ‌labor requirements for companies to obtain the funding, but⁤ projects that have‍ better labor conditions‍ will have a greater ⁤chance of receiving the funding, an Energy Department official said on ⁤the⁤ call.

The administration will⁣ also offer $3.5 billion in funding‍ to domestic battery manufacturers, Granholm said.

For ⁤the advanced ⁣vehicles, ⁣$2 billion in grants⁢ will come‌ from the Inflation Reduction⁣ Act which was passed by⁢ Democrats last year, and $10 billion in loans will derive from the‍ Energy ⁢Department’s Loans Program Office.

Reporting by​ Timothy Gardner in Washington
Additional reporting by⁣ Joe White in Detroit;
Editing‍ by Bill Berkrot and Matthew LewisOur Standards: The ‍Thomson Reuters Trust Principles. Acquire Licensing Rights, opens new ‌tabTimothy GardnerThomson ReutersTimothy reports on ⁢energy and environment policy and is ⁢based in Washington, D.C. His coverage ranges from the latest in nuclear power, to environment regulations, to U.S….

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