Construction of Northvolt's Quebec EV battery plant halted until Jan. 23 - Action News
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Montreal

Construction of Northvolt's Quebec EV battery plant halted until Jan. 23

An environmental group filed an injunction request in an effort to stop the construction of Northvolt's massive, multibillion-dollar electric vehicle battery plant east of Montreal.

Environmental group worried about damage to wetlands if construction allowed to go ahead

See the site in Quebec where Northvolt wants to build an EV battery plant

8 months ago
Duration 0:38
Northvolt, a Swedish company and a giant in the field of electric vehicle batteries, has earmarked land near the Richelieu River in Saint-Basile-le-Grand east of Montreal, to build a massive, multibillion-dollar EV battery plant. Work halted in January pending the outcome of a court injunction request by an environmental group.

Work on the construction of Northvolt'smassive, multibillion-dollar plant east of Montreal is on hold until next Tuesday,pending a court rulingon an injunction request filed by an environmental group.

That group, which is called the Centre qubcois du droit de l'environnement (CQDE), filed the injunction request in Superior Court on Thursday, calling for the work to stop. Three citizens are also part of the courtchallenge.

Northvolt, a Swedish company and agiant in the field of electric vehicle batteries, said it decided to suspend work on the construction site later that day "out of respect for the ongoing legal process."

Both sides were in court on Friday morning to present their arguments, but the case was postponed until next Tuesday.

Northvolt's legal team said it only received documents about the case on Thursday and needed more time to prepare. Along with the postponement, the judge ordered the stop on the construction work to continue until 5 p.m. on Tuesday.

In a statement issued after court was adjourned, Northvolt said that its previous projects have respected some of the strictest environmental norms in the world.

"And we plan to continue to abide by the environmental rules that are in effect," the statement reads.

The plant, if built, will be located on the border of Saint-Basile-le-Grand and McMasterville, about 30 kilometres east of Montreal.

A fence in front of a large field.
Northvolt wants to build a massive plant on the border of McMasterville and Saint-Basile-le-Grand, about 30 kilometres east of Montreal. (Ivanoh Demers/Radio-Canada)

As part of the construction work, Northvolt began fellingtrees at the site earlier this week, after getting the green light from Quebec's Environment Ministry.

Environmental groups have raised concerns about the damage the construction would cause to wetlands in that area.

Lawyers for the CQDE argue that the Environment Ministry had recently gotten in the way of another project in that area due to the potential damage it would cause to wetlands. They say the ministry seems to have applied a different standard for Northvolt.

Last September, both Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and Quebec Premier Franois Legaultparticipated in a news conference where the massive project was announced.

Trudeau called the project "historic and transformative."

The first phase of Northvolt'sproject, valued at $7billion in total investment,would have an annual battery cell manufacturing capacity of up to 30 GWh. It wouldalso create up to3,000jobs in the region as the plant reaches its full production potential.

During last fall's announcement, no timeline was provided for the second phase of the project, which is expected to double the output.

WATCH | Federal, provincial politicians welcome Northvolt's investment in Quebec:

Quebec, Canada bet billions on an EV battery plant east of Montreal

11 months ago
Duration 2:07
Northvolt, a Swedish battery manufacturing giant, says it will build a new multibillion-dollar electric vehicle battery plant east of Montreal. Quebec leaders are calling it the largest private investment in the province's history along with billions in public funding but others say it carries no guarantees it will pay off for taxpayers.

With files from Radio-Canada and Sharon Yonan Renold