Company wins court ruling to continue development of Michigan factory serving EV industry

opinions2024-05-21 07:50:036322

GREEN TOWNSHIP, Mich. (AP) — A judge has ordered a Michigan community to stop blocking efforts to bring a major electric vehicle battery business to a rural region.

Gotion, a China-based manufacturer, was granted a preliminary injunction Friday after arguing that Mecosta County’s Green Township has refused to stick to an agreement made by elected officials who were subsequently removed from office.

Despite that recall last November, a deal still is a deal, Gotion said.

Gotion “has already invested over $24 million into the project by way of real estate acquisition costs and other related fees,” U.S. District Judge Jane Beckering said.

She ordered the township to comply with a previously approved development agreement while the case remains in court.

The company plans to make components for electric vehicle batteries, about 60 miles (95 kilometers) north of Grand Rapids. The project, valued at more than $2 billion, could bring thousands of jobs.

Address of this article:http://juandenovaisland.afischerphasedrives.com/content-41e599435.html

Popular

Investigators return to Long Island home of Gilgo Beach serial killing suspect

Winston Peters to meet Anthony Blinken and Trump official in Washington

Samoa citizenship bill passes first hurdle in Parliament with help of ACT and NZ First

AT&T data breach: Millions of customers caught up in major dark web leak

What a blast to work at NASA. Space agency is sky

Truth Social: Trump's DJT stock plummets days after going public

Police Minister admits NZ cannot compete with Australian recruitment offer

Grief and anger in Moscow following concert attack

LINKS