By David Shepardson
WASHINGTON (Reuters) – Samsung is considering a building a battery plant in central Illinois, Senator Dick Durbin told reporters on Thursday.
Durbin said Samsung is in discussions to build a battery plant in Normal, Illinois, according to a video of the press conference posted on the Pantagraph newspaper website. Electric-vehicle startup Rivian has a factory in Normal and said in April that South Korea’s Samsung SDI Co would supply battery cells for its vehicles.
“We are competing for a major Samsung battery facility. The delegation came in from Korea this week. I spoke to them and others did as well,” Durbin said. “This Samsung facility, we hope, will be located next door to Rivian. That decision has not been made. Having that battery facility will also create thousands of jobs.”
Last month, Reuters reported that Samsung SDI, an affiliate of Samsung Electronics, may build a battery cell plant in the United States. Reuters also reported that Samsung SDI has been in talks to supply batteries manufactured at a potential U.S. factory with electric vehicle makers including Stellantis and Rivian, which is backed by Amazon and Ford Motor Co.
The South Korean battery maker is considering investing at least 3 trillion won ($2.62 billion) to manufacture batteries for Stellantis and a minimum of 1 trillion won for batteries to Rivian, according to the source.
The source added that Samsung SDI has not yet decided whether to launch the U.S. plant as a joint venture with carmakers, or as an independent manufacturing site.
Samsung SDI has EV battery plants in South Korea, China and Hungary, which supply customers such as BMW, Ford, Volvo and Volkswagen.
Samsung and Durbin’s office did not immediately comment Thursday. Rivian declined to comment.
On Wednesday, Reuters reported that Rivian is in discussions to invest at least $5 billion in a new vehicle plant near Fort Worth, Texas, a city document showed. Durbin also said he expected Rivian to expand in Illinois and add more jobs.
(Reporting by David Shepardson; Editing by David Gregorio)