Council leaders in the North East have backed plans that pave the way for a £450m gigafactory creating hundreds of jobs.
A planning application from Envision AESC that will pave the way for a site at the International Advanced Manufacturing Park in Sunderland has been applauded by Councillor Tracey Dixon and Councillor Graeme Miller, leaders of South Tyneside Council and Sunderland City Council.
The company - world-leading battery division of global green tech company Envision Group - submitted plans for the UK’s first at-scale battery manufacturing plant at the IAMP at the end of last week.
They proposed a 9GWh-capacity gigafactory, with state-of-the-art battery technology, to form part of a £1bn partnership with Nissan UK and Sunderland City Council to create an electric vehicle hub supporting next generation EV production and accelerating the transition to net zero carbon mobility. 
The facility will create 750 green jobs and safeguard 300 jobs from its existing Sunderland plant if approved by the local planning authority, Sunderland City Council.  
Councillor Dixon said: “This is a game-changing development, part of a wider plan that will create green jobs, producing green products, and powering green cars. 
“It’s a statement of this area’s credentials in low carbon and of our commitment to creating a more sustainable economy and we’re delighted to see plans move forward so rapidly after it was first announced.  
“We’re focused as a council on attracting investment that will give our communities and our businesses opportunities – that will bolster South Tyneside.
“This is a huge moment for IAMP, and for the borough which will see huge benefits from this should it go ahead.”
IAMP was brought about by a partnership between South Tyneside and Sunderland Councils, formed in 2014, and began moving forward at pace in 2018 when enabling works started on the site, which stands just north of Nissan. 
Envision AESC would be the third new development on IAMP, which is expected to create some 7,000 jobs when it is fully developed out.  
Construction on the gigafactory – if planning is approved - is due to begin in 2022 to support battery production in 2024, which will pave the way for potential future investment of £1.8bn on the site to generate 35GWh capacity and 4,500 new high value green jobs. 
Envision AESC’S existing Sunderland plant has been supplying batteries to Nissan for the LEAF electric vehicle for the last nine years.
The new scaled up Gigafactory will produce batteries to power more than 100,000 EVs annually, using new Gen5 battery cells with a third more energy density to improve range, efficiency and exceptional performance, including 100 per cent safety record/zero critical incidents.
Councillor Miller said: “Our partnership at IAMP is one that we have always been confident would deliver for our residents, and it did that very quickly with the arrival of SNOP and Faltec. “ 
The planning application was submitted following a public consultation exercise with local stakeholders and residents which received 80 per cent positive support.