Stellantis Powers Up Electric Plans With Samsung SDI U.S. Deal

Stellantis and South Korea's Samsung SDI Co Ltd have entered a preliminary agreement on a joint venture to produce electric vehicle (EV) battery cells and modules in the United States, the two companies said on Friday. The tie-up comes less than a week after the world's fourth largest automaker signed a similar agreement with South Korea's LG Energy Solution (LGES), as it rolls out its 30 billion euro ($35 billion) electrification plan. Automakers are investing billions of dollars to accelerate a transition to low-emission mobility and prepare for a progressive phase-out of internal combustion engines.
Stellantis, which was formed in January via the merger of Italian-American automaker Fiat Chrysler and France's PSA, earlier this year announced it would invest more than 30 billion euros through 2025 on electrifying its vehicle line-up. The two battery deals will support its goal to have EVs account for over 40% of its U.S. sales by 2030, providing an annual battery production capacity of up to 80 gigawatt hours (GWh), which could power about 1.2 million electric vehicles.

The Stellantis-Samsung SDI venture aims to start operations by the first half of 2025 with an initial annual battery production capacity of 23 GWh
Martino De Ambroggi, an analyst at broker Equita, said the joint ventures with Samsung SDI and LSEG Stellantis would secured the needed capacity to meet the company's U.S. electrification target. Stellantis has said it wants to secure more than 130 GWh of global battery capacity by 2025 and over 260 GWh by 2030. As part of this plan Stellantis has said it will build three battery plants in Europe - in Germany, France and Italy - and two in North America.
The group, whose brands include Peugeot, Fiat, Opel and U.S. best-sellers Jeep and Ram, also aims to have more than 70% of its sales in Europe be of low-emission vehicles by 2030. The Stellantis-Samsung SDI venture aims to start operations by the first half of 2025 with an initial annual battery production capacity of 23 GWh, while it could increase to 40 GWh in the future, the two companies said in a joint statement. They did not provide any financial details.
The batteries produced at the U.S. joint venture will be supplied to Stellantis' factories in the United States, Canada and Mexico. The location of the factory is under review. Samsung SDI, an affiliate of South Korean tech giant Samsung Electronics, already has EV battery plants in South Korea, China and Hungary, which supply customers such as BMW and Ford Motor. By 0905 GMT Milan-listed shares in Stellantis were up 0.6%, broadly in line with Italy's blue-chip index. Samsung SDI shares closed up nearly 2%.
(This story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)
Latest News
Amaan Ahmed | Jun 5, 2026E85 Fuel Priced At Rs 82.12 Per Litre In Delhi; First E85 Station InauguratedAt the opening of the first E85-dispensing station in the national capital, petroleum minister Hardeep Singh Puri promised E85 will be Rs 20 cheaper than E20 petrol.1 min read
car&bike Team | Jun 5, 2026Renault Duster 1.0 Turbo Fuel Efficiency Figure RevealedSmaller turbo-petrol unit is offered in the base and lower mid-spec trims of the new Duster; it only gets a manual gearbox option.1 min read
car&bike Team | Jun 5, 2026Green SM's Electric Taxi Service Now Live In India: VinFast Limo Green MPVs Deployed In Delhi-NCRBacked by VinFast parent Vingroup, the fleet uses the VinFast Limo Green electric MPV and will compete with established players such as Uber and Ola.2 mins read
Jaiveer Mehra | Jun 5, 2026Audi Nuvolari Debuts As Limited-Run 987 bhp Hybrid SupercarLimited to 499 units, the Nuvolari shares its running gear with the Lamborghini Temerario though Audi has upper the performance figures.1 min read
Amaan Ahmed | Jun 5, 2026Tata Design Chief On Ferrari EV's Polarising Shape: Avoiding "Sameness" Crucial, But...Social media didn't take kindly to the reveal of Ferrari's first-ever electric car, with innumerable brickbats thrown in Maranello's direction over its design. We spoke to Tata's Martin Uhlarik to understand a car designer's take on the subject3 mins read
Bilal Firfiray | Jun 4, 2026BMW M2 Gets AWD For The First Time; No Additional Power, But Is 0.3 Seconds QuickerWe all frowned when the M3/M4 got a (switchable) AWD system. Now the smaller and more fun to drive M2 has received the same hardware. Should the RS3 be worried?1 min read
Preetam Bora | Jun 4, 2026Royal Enfield Bullet 650 Review: Is This the Most Desirable RE 650 Twin Yet?We spent some quality time with the new Royal Enfield Bullet 650, and here's our honest take – what we love, and where there's room to do better.1 min read
Janak Sorap | Jun 2, 2026California Superbike School: Finding Speed The Right WayThree days of coaching, track time and self-discovery at California Superbike School revealed that riding faster begins with understanding how to ride better.7 mins read
Girish Karkera | May 31, 20262026 Honda City e:HEV Review: Smartest Compact Sedan To Buy?The most affordable strong hybrid sedan in India looks more interesting than any of its past avatars1 min read
Bilal Firfiray | May 29, 2026Skoda Octavia vRS Review: The Sensible Car Every Car Guy (Eventually) WantsThe Skoda Octavia vRS blends practicality with performance. It’s a real enthusiast appeal in a sensible sedan package.1 min read
Bilal Firfiray | May 25, 2026Renault Duster 1.3 Turbo DCT Road Test Review: The Solid Middle GroundMarking its return, the Renault Duster offers a strong ride quality, a refined 1.3 turbo-petrol engine, balanced handling and lot more impressive cabin. Should you buy it though?5 mins read


















































































































