A crucial part of St. Thomas’s economic future is now taking shape in the city’s northeast area, where foundation work has commenced on what will become Canada’s largest electric vehicle battery gigafactory. Officials from the Volkswagen subsidiary PowerCo Canada announced the “significant milestone,” on Tuesday, stating that Magill Development Canada had begun pouring the foundations for three major structures covering about 79,000 square meters (850,000 square feet). “Electric vehicles are the future of the global automotive industry, and we’re proud to lead such an important investment, while placing Canada at the forefront of innovative EV battery production,” Frank Blome, CEO of PowerCo SE, said in a statement. PowerCo awarded contracts to Magil and Steelcon for work on the gigafactory’s first cell manufacturing building and essential works back in August. Steelcon will begin operations at the site “in the coming weeks,” as stated by the company on Tuesday. This massive construction project comes with some impressive figures: There will be more than 500,00 square feet of formwork-the mold into which concrete is poured. Over 32,000 cubic meters will be poured for the foundation. A total of 4,850 metric tonnes of rebar will be utilized. Watching the foundation being poured was an “extremely exciting moment” for both Magil and its team based in London, said Paul Henke, president of Magil. The St. Thomas facility will be PowerCo’s third and largest EV battery gigafactory. Photos released by PowerCo indicate that foundation work has been ongoing at the site for several weeks.
WATCH | Ottawa reacts against GM & Stellantis:

Feds push back against GM & Stellantis by limiting tariff-free vehicle imports from U.S..
The federal government plans to cap how many tariff-exempt vehicles General Motors and Stellantis can import from America for sale here-an action meant to pressure both companies into reinvesting their efforts within Canadian manufacturing.Canada granted Stellantis nearly $105 million towards upgrading two Ontario plants including Brampton; Ottawa says they are currently reviewing whether there was any breach regarding those agreements made by automakers.
The government also intends on restricting how many cars either entity can import duty-free into Canada.
GM mentioned they’re evaluating other options concerning their CAMI operation established over three decades ago while Stellantis maintains Canada remains vital importance along with intentions concerning Brampton yet reiterated they’ll share specifics after further talks with Canadian authorities.
Blome commented that PowerCo aims “to create a global leader within battery solutions possessing strong presences throughout both Europe & North America.”
In another statement Melanie Joly-Canada’s Minister responsible innovation science trade remarked how opening this plant would strengthen domestic electric vehicle storage capabilities generating well-paying positions contributing benefits toward not only Ontario but encompassing wider regional effects across steelmaking aluminum sectors too.
[Source](https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/london/powerco-volkswagen-factory-st-thomas-ontario-9.6955787)









