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Northvolt collapse leaves EU taxpayer on the hook for €293m

• Nov 25, 2024, 1:25 PM
2 min de lecture
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The collapse of Swedish battery maker Northvolt AB has left a hole in the EU's ambitions for electric vehicle success – but also a potential three-hundred-million-euro hole in its budget.  

The company filed for bankruptcy protection under the US Chapter 11 procedure last week, as it only had about $30 million (€28.81m) in cash remaining. 

Some of its debts of $5.84 billion are owed to the EU itself, which has sought to boost potential European champions in a sector seen as key to the green transition.  

“We backed several loans of the European Investment Bank to Northvolt battery factory,” European Commission spokesperson Veerle Nuyts told reporters on Monday, adding that the EU’s exposure – the unrepaid value of the loan — “currently amounts to $313m, under the guarantee of the European fund for strategic investments.” 

That fund, set up in 2015 as a flagship policy of then-Commission president Jean-Claude Juncker, offered €21 bn in funding for infrastructure, innovation and small business.

In 2017, the Commission also set up the European Battery Alliance, in a bid to gain European leadership against tough competition from China.  

“The work we have done on batteries, including with the battery alliance, has been a success,” EU spokesperson Johanna Bernsel told reporters on Monday, saying that a total manufacturing capacity of 167 Gigawatt hours was installed in 2023. 

But Northvolt was, until last week, the most credible player in the European market – and its collapse leaves creditors fighting for scraps from the estate.

“The European Investment Bank is closely monitoring the situation,” a spokesperson for the Luxembourg-based public lender told Euronews in a statement.

“We are determined to reach a constructive resolution that will safeguard the EIB's and the EU's interests” and “will continue to support strategic industries driving the transition to a net zero economy,” the EIB spokesperson added.  

Any shortfall could now have to be borne by the EU budget, which is mainly funded by contributions from national finance ministries. 

A draft of the EU budget for next year, formally agreed by member states on Monday, sets total commitments at just over €192.8 billion, with €800m set aside as headroom to meet unforeseeable needs.