Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Cars
  3. Trash
  4. News

Toyota announces site for its first U.S. battery plant

Add as a preferred source on Google

Toyota is doubling down on its electric vehicle ambitions with the building of a $1.3 billion battery production plant in North Carolina, its first such facility in the U.S.

The Japanese automaker announced the plan on Monday, December 6, revealing that it will build the plant in the Greensboro-Randolph area about 80 miles northeast of Charlotte.

Upon completion in 2025, the site will feature four production lines, with each one able to deliver enough lithium-ion batteries for 200,000 electric vehicles that year. Moving forward, Toyota said it wants to expand the facility to at least six production lines for a combined total of up to 1.2 million vehicles per year.

The facility is expected to employ around 1,750 people and use 100% renewable energy.

The car giant said the $1.3 billion investment is part of a larger $3.4 billion injection announced in October that will help Toyota expand battery production in the U.S. through 2030.

Commenting on Monday’s announcement, Ted Ogawa, CEO of Toyota Motor North America, described the Greensboro-Randolph location as offering “the right conditions for this investment, including the infrastructure, high-quality education system, access to a diverse and skilled workforce, and a welcoming environment for doing business.”

Toyota is the latest automaker to announce plans for new battery production facilities in local markets. With demand for electric cars on the rise, the move is designed to simplify the supply chain for more cost-effective production. For example, localization allows car companies to lower shipping costs as the heavy weight of the batteries means they’re expensive to transport over long distances.

In September, Ford and battery supplier SK Innovation announced a joint investment of more than $11 billion in new facilities in Kentucky and Tennessee for the production of electric vehicles and batteries, with the creation of around 11,000 jobs, while earlier this year General Motors said it will build two battery plants in the U.S. in addition to the two that it’s already constructing.

Tesla, meanwhile, has been producing electric vehicle batteries in partnership with Panasonic at its Gigafactory in Nevada since 2016.

Trevor Mogg
Contributing Editor
Not so many moons ago, Trevor moved from one tea-loving island nation that drives on the left (Britain) to another (Japan)…
Porsche’s 2027 Taycan gets virtual E-Shift gears hooked to real paddle shifters
Porsche’s is trying to solve one of the most prominent EV hardware problems with software.
Car, Coupe, Sports Car

While electric performance cars have gotten quite fast, especially when it comes to driving in a straight line, they still struggle to replicate the engaging feel of a regular sports car. Missing are the gear changes, the rev build, and the physical feedback that make a sports car feel alive.

Porsche thinks it can fix this with software, and the 2027 Taycan update is its most serious attempt yet. The car comes with something called E-Shift, a system that adds eight virtual gears operated using the paddle shifters behind the steering wheel.

Read more
China has new EV safety rules ready. The US needs to follow in its footsteps
Mandatory battery fire protections and hard power cutoffs show what a tougher EV safety playbook could look like in the U.S.
EV

China's EV safety rules are about to make automakers prove their cars can fail safely, not merely warn people before trouble spreads.

Starting July 1, 2026, two mandatory national standards will require stronger battery safeguards and a physical one-touch way to cut high-voltage power during an emergency. The pressure points are the ones drivers, firefighters, insurers, and regulators can't brush aside for much longer, including battery fires, crash damage, smoke exposure, and rescue access after a severe incident.

Read more
Mercedes’s Chinese partner made an EV that costs under $10,000 and looks deceptively stylish
At around $10,000, the Arcfox Beta T1 has a feature list that embarrasses several $30,000 US EVs.
Car, Transportation, Vehicle

BAIC, the Beijing-based automaker that produces Mercedes-Benz vehicles in China, has launched the refreshed Arcfox Beta T1 on June 16, a compact EV priced roughly between $9,200 and $11,700, depending on the trim.

It's not coming to the United States, but the fact that its most affordable version undercuts the cheapest new car sold here by roughly $13,000 and the cheapest EV by almost $20,000 deserves some attention. What BAIC has built here is a direct indictment of the higher EV costs here in America.

Read more