EV Firm Partners with BYD to Build Vietnam Battery Plant
By Reuters | 27 Jan, 2026
Kim Long Motor is building a $130 million plant in central Vietnam with BYD's technical assistance.
Vietnam auto manufacturer Kim Long Motor said on Tuesday that it was partnering with China's BYD to develop a $130 million plant to produce batteries for commercial electric vehicles in central Vietnam.
Under the agreement, Kim Long Motor will fund the construction of the facility, while BYD will provide comprehensive technical and technological support, the company said in a statement.
The plant will be on a 4.4 hectare plot of land and will have a capacity of 3 gigawatt-hours per year, Kim Long Motor said in a statement.
The company stated that operations are expected to commence soon, but it did not give an exact timeline.
In its second phase, the facility will expand to 10 hectares and double its production capacity to 6 GWh per year. The expansion will also introduce battery production for electric passenger cars.
The plant will produce batteries for commercial vehicles, including buses, trucks, and minibuses.
Vietnam's EV market is rapidly expanding, led by domestic automaker VinFast, which dominates the sector.
VinFast recently entered the commercial vehicle segment with the launch of its electric cargo van, the EC Van, designed to support sustainable urban freight transport.
(Reporting by Phuong Nguyen; Editing by David Stanway)
Recent Articles
- Your Answers to These 7 Questions Will Reveal Whether You're Sane or a Closet Lunatic
- US Oil Companies Profit from Strait of Hormuz Closure Says Russian Oil CEO
- Trump Faces New Republican Resistance in Congress as Midterms Approach
- SpaceX IPO Already Two Times Oversubscribed
- SpaceX Signs Google As AI Compute Client After Landing Anthropic
- $1 Trillion in Stock Market Valuation Erased by AI Chip Selloff
- Anthropic Urges Industry Pause As AI Nears Recursive Self-Development
- Trump's South Lawn UFC Birthday Bash to Mix Politics with Punches
- Trump Policies Targeting 39 Nationalities of Immigrants Invalidated
- One Man Holds Back the World's Progress toward Green Energy Sufficiency and Prosperity
