VinFast, a Vietnamese manufacturer, announced on Friday that it will postpone opening its manufacturing for electric vehicles in the United States until 2025 due to a procedural snag.
In March of last year, a division of the conglomerate Vingroup JSC announced plans to build a $4 billion electric vehicle plant on 712 hectares (1759 acres) of property in Chatham County, North Carolina, with completion scheduled for July 2024.
In a statement on the delay, VinFast stated, "We need more time to finish administrative procedures." The statement made no mention of when in 2025 the facility was anticipated to begin operations.
Customers may be eligible for incentives after the factory has finished building VinFast EVs in accordance with the requirements of the U.S.-signed Inflation Reduction Act. Joseph Biden, the president.
The municipal government granted VinFast an air permit last month so that company could begin building. It still need a U.S. authorization. Army Corps of Engineers created a plan to minimize harm to wetlands and water quality.
According to the company's most recent prospectus, which was published on Thursday, the factory, with phase one capital expenditures for construction of $1.4 billion, is planned to generate more than 7,000 employment and produce 150,000 vehicles annually.
In order to raise money for the development of its factory, VinFast applied for a Nasdaq initial public offering in the United States last year.
The first 45 vehicles were delivered by VinFast in California on the first day of its first sales outside of Vietnam last week.
In 2022, it made 14.9 trillion dong ($631 million), a 6.9% decrease over 2021. According to its most recent prospectus, net losses increased by 55% to 49.8 trillion dong from 32.2 trillion dong.
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