Rivian and Mercedes-Benz are planning a joint venture to produce electric vans, including a new production line at a Mercedes facility in Europe.
Rivian, the electric vehicle startup backed by Amazon, and Mercedes-Benz are forming a joint venture to make battery-powered vans in response to increasing demand for cleaner commercial vehicles.
As part of the agreement, the companies will share investment costs to produce large electric vans that will be sold under both the Mercedes-Benz and Rivian brands. The joint-venture company they’re forming will also set up a factory in Europe at an existing Mercedes-Benz site within a few years. The factory will aim to build vehicles based on the electric vans both companies currently produce.
The companies didn’t share details of the cost and timing of their venture.
“We are sharing investments and technology because we also share the same strategic ambition: accelerating the electrification of the van market with sustainable and superior products,” Mathias Geisen, who leads the Mercedes-Benz Van unit, said in an emailed statement.
The move comes as Rivian, which already supplies electric delivery vans to Amazon, works to scale up production after a rocky start this year owing to supply chain disruptions. The Irvine, California-based company, which also counts Ford as an investor, is the best-funded automotive startup in U.S. history. It saw its market cap surge after going public last year, becoming one of the world’s most valuable automakers, before a slow production start triggered a stock selloff earlier this year.
The partnership with Mercedes “gives Rivian added credibility in the (European) marketplace and should enable it to leverage Mercedes’ established supply chain and manufacturing footprint in Europe, providing the OEM a short-cut to entering a new market with a very credible partner,” Deutsche Bank equity analyst Emmanuel Rosner said in a research note.
Production of R1T pickups and R1S SUVs at Rivian’s Normal, Illinois, plant has improved this year, along with output of electric vans for Amazon. The company expects to build 25,000 vehicles this year. In December 2021 it also announced plans to build a second plant in Georgia, a $5 billion facility that will have capacity to produce 400,000 vehicles annually when it opens in 2024.
Rivian CEO RJ Scaringe
Rivian CEO RJ Scaringe says the company stands to gain from the recently enacted Inflation Reduction Act, which has new incentives for buying electric vehicles.
“The commercial segment, in particular, will benefit from the strong incentives for fleet operators to electrify and our (Rivian Commercial Van) platform has been developed for a wide range of applications,” he said in the company’s earnings call last month.
Rivian shares jumped nearly 11% on the news to close at $36.88 in Nasdaq trading on Thursday.