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Swedish battery maker Northvolt secures $5 billion to expand in Skellefteå

Northvolt on Tuesday announced it had secured $5 billion in financing order to enable the expansion of its 'gigafactory' in northern Sweden.

Swedish battery maker Northvolt secures $5 billion to expand in Skellefteå
Northvolt CEO Peter Carlsson. Photo: Magnus Hjalmarson Neideman/SvD/TT

“In addition to the expansion of Northvolt Ett’s cathode production and cell manufacturing, the finance package will enable the expansion of the adjacent recycling plant,” Northvolt said in a statement.

The financing is provided by “a group of 23 commercial banks, as well as the European Investment Bank (EIB) and the Nordic Investment Bank (NIB).”

Peter Carlsson, CEO of Northvolt, called the financing “a milestone for the European energy transition.”

With this loan, the battery maker has secured $13 billion in equity and debt seeking to supply the growing market of electric vehicles (EVs).

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According to Northvolt, it has secured “long-term offtake contracts” worth over $55 billion, including with carmakers BMW, Volvo Cars and Volkswagen Group.

Europe accounts for just three percent of global battery cell production – which China dominates – but it is aiming to catch up and has set its sights on 25 percent of the market by the end of the decade.

In November, Northvolt said it had developed a new battery based on sodium-ion technology, which uses less critical minerals.

Sodium-ion batteries are viewed as a cheaper and in some respects safer alternative to the lithium-ion batteries widely used in both electronics and electric vehicles but which pose a fire risk if damaged.

While sodium-ion technology has been around for decades, it has lagged lithium-ion batteries in performance.

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Why North Korean hackers could leave Sweden short of alcohol this weekend

If you're thinking of quitting the booze, now may be a good time, as Sweden may run low on alcohol in just a few days.

Why North Korean hackers could leave Sweden short of alcohol this weekend

The reason? Problems down the distribution chain, as a result of a ransomware attack by a North Korean hacker group on Skanlog, a logistics firm that delivers to Sweden’s state-run alcohol monopoly Systembolaget, reports business site Dagens Industri.

Systembolaget confirmed to The Local that this may have a knock-on effect on supplies.

“This is one of our distributors, they deliver up to 25 percent of the alcohol. But we do have other suppliers as well, we have to scale up the deliveries. So I cannot say exactly what the shortage will look like in the stores,” Systembolaget press officer Sofia Sjöman Waas said.

Not only the weekend is coming up, but also Walpurgis Night on April 30th, a popular party day in university towns.

“It is too early to say what will happen. Small stores around the country have one delivery once a week and this might not affect you at all. Other stores have deliveries every day,” Sjöman Waas told The Local.

It’s unlikely that shelves will run completely dry, but some products – mostly wine, but also beer and liquor – may be out of stock.

“But in general our consumers don’t buy a lot. They come in, they buy a couple of bottles, and they consume it within a couple of days or a week,” said Sjöman Waas.

Article by Emma Löfgren and Gearóid Ó Droighneáin

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