Mercedes-Benz and Rivian plan JV to make electric vans in Europe

Reuters

Published Sep 08, 2022 09:11AM ET

Updated Sep 08, 2022 11:48AM ET

BERLIN (Reuters) - Mercedes-Benz Vans and Rivian are planning a joint venture to produce electric vans in a factory in Poland, Hungary or Romania within the next few years, Mercedes-Benz Vans said on Thursday, sending Rivian shares up more than 5%.

The companies have signed a memorandum of understanding and are planning how to produce their models on a joint production line, Mercedes-Benz said, adding it was also developing a new all-electric van architecture of its own called VAN.EA.

Mercedes-Benz Vans chief Mathias Geisen told reporters this would be a 50-50 joint venture and said talks should be concluded "very soon."

"We have a lot of expertise when it comes to industrializing (vans)... but on the other hand Rivian brings in a lot of new technology expertise when it comes to electric mobility," he said. "That's the right match to find a win-win situation here."

The two companies will make two large vans - one based on Mercedes-Benz's VAN.EA platform and the other based on the Rivian Light Van electric platform - at the plant, which will be Rivian's first site in Europe.

Mercedes also said it would restructure German factories that currently build Sprinter vans to offset higher costs for electric vehicles.

"Currently all our transporters are produced in Germany. We are the only manufacturer doing this ... we want to keep production in Germany but it is only viable in combination with a lower cost location," Geisen said.

Mercedes is already cooperating with Renault (EPA:RENA) and Nissan (OTC:NSANY) on small electric vans, which would not be affected as they are in a different vehicle segment with different requirements, Geisen said.

The collaboration with Mercedes comes at a crucial time for Rivian. The electric van and adventure vehicle company has struggled to ramp up production at its Illinois factory as supply chain disruptions and rising materials prices forced it to cut staff and delay product programmes.

Rivian shares are down nearly 68% for the year to date.

Sharing the costs of a European assembly plant with Mercedes should help the startup, which burned through $1.2 billion in the second quarter, conserve cash and save for its second U.S. assembly plant planned for 2025.