Britishvolt in talks to secure Northumberland gigafactory
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UK battery firm Britishvolt is in talks over a possible sale that could secure the future of a Northumberland factory.
The firm has been developing plans to build a £3.8bn plant producing batteries for electric vehicles in Cambois.
But it has already come close to collapse and been forced to delay production by 18 months until mid-2025.
The plant is expected to employ more than 3,000 people.
The sale will provide funding to continue its plans to build the site, Britishvolt said.
'Consortium of investors'
In a statement, it said: "Britishvolt is in discussions with a consortium of investors concerning the potential majority sale of the company"
It also said the deal would allow it to "pursue" plans to build a "strong and viable" battery manufacturing business in the UK.
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In November, the firm's chairman Peter Rolton said he did not want to "sell the site" or "give away the company".
His comments came after the government rejected a £30m advance in funding, as requested by firm bosses, forcing 300 existing staff to take a pay cut.
The government had previously championed the project to the point where it had committed £100m in total to Britishvolt, but refused to allow any funding to be drawn down early.
At the time, Mr Rolton said it had a "reasonable runway of funding in place" and the company was "working absolutely tirelessly" to "get more funding in."
It is understood a sale would mean Britishvolt can continue with developing the factory, until it can begin making a profit from the sale of batteries to carmakers.
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