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Silicon Valley startup Lyten buys Northvolt for an
undisclosed
sum
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Lyten CEO expects battery cell deliveries to resume in
2026
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Deal includes Northvolt's projects in Sweden and Germany
By Marie Mannes
STOCKHOLM, Aug 7 (Reuters) - U.S. battery startup Lyten
has agreed to buy most of bankrupt Swedish battery maker
Northvolt, it said on Thursday, potentially offering a way back
for the European company that was once seen as the region's
answer to rivals in Asia.
Lyten, a Silicon Valley battery startup developing
lithium-sulphur cells as a cleaner alternative to lithium-ion,
is backed by Jeep-owner Stellantis ( STLA ) and U.S. delivery
services provider FedEx ( FDX ).
The deal revives hopes for European battery independence
after Northvolt - the continent's potential rival to major
Chinese electric vehicle battery makers - filed for bankruptcy
in March, making it one of Sweden's largest corporate failures,
with a frantic push to find a buyer.
"Our plans are... in large part to pick up where the
Northvolt team left off," Lyten CEO Dan Cook told Reuters,
declining to disclose the purchase price beyond saying it was at
a "substantial discount" to the original asset value.
Northvolt has received much criticism that the company
overpromised while failing to deliver battery cells deemed good
enough quality for clients, even with help from its biggest
customer, truckmaker Scania.
Lyten hopes to restart the flagship Skelleftea plant in
northern Sweden and resume deliveries of lithium-ion battery
cells in 2026. It acquired Northvolt's energy storage business
in Poland in July, Europe's largest, and is targeting
automotive, defence and energy storage markets.
Cook said several of Northvolt's former management would be
joining Lyten, though not founder and ex-CEO Peter Carlsson.
"We are focused on developing to be the leaders in locally
sourced, locally manufactured batteries for both the North
American and European markets right now," he said.
Lyten said in July that it had secured over $200 million in
additional equity investment to support its acquisitions and
expansion plans.
Cook said Lyten would prove its worth to Northvolt's former
customers by focusing first on providing high yields to a single
customer. Northvolt's order book once totaled over $50 billion
from automakers such as BMW, Volkswagen and
Audi.
"We actually think they'll come back, perhaps quicker than
people believe," said Cook, Leyton's co-founder.
The deal includes Northvolt's projects in Sweden and
Germany, as well as its intellectual property. Work was also
underway to acquire its Canadian unit.
Before its collapse, Northvolt expanded across the Atlantic
but later refocused on Sweden as its financial crisis deepened,
selling assets for nominal sums.