Rivian
Rivian secures conditional $6.6B loan from DOE to boost electric vehicle production in Georgia

Rivian receives conditional commitment for up to $6.6B loan

Dec. 3, 2024
If finalized, the loan would support the construction of Rivian’s next facility in Stanton Springs North, near Social Circle, Georgia.

American all-electric automaker Rivian Automotive recently received conditional commitment from the U.S. Department of Energy’s Advanced Technology Vehicle Manufacturing Loan Program for a loan of up to $6.6 billion to accelerate its growth and electric vehicle design, development, and manufacturing.

If finalized, the loan would support the construction of Rivian’s next facility in Stanton Springs North, near Social Circle, Georgia, expanding the company’s domestic production capacity to support demand from the U.S. and international markets. This loan from DOE would provide funding for production of the company’s midsize platform, which underpins the R2, a midsize SUV, and the R3/R3X, a midsize crossover.

Rivian intends to build the facility in two phases, each resulting in 200,000 units of annual production capacity, for a total of 400,000 units of annual capacity supporting the sale of American EVs in international markets. Phase 1 of the project is expected to start production in 2028. Rivian is expected to create approximately 7,500 operations jobs through 2030 at the company’s future manufacturing facility in Georgia. This is in addition to 2,000 expected full-time construction jobs that will use the region’s talent and workforce to further strengthen the domestic EV ecosystem.

See also: 2025 new models: Alternative fuel light-duty vehicles

“This loan will help create thousands of new American jobs and further strengthen U.S. leadership in EV manufacturing and technology,” said RJ Scaringe, Rivian founder and CEO. “This loan would enable Rivian to more aggressively scale our U.S. manufacturing footprint for our competitively priced R2 and R3 vehicles that emphasize both capability and affordability. A robust ecosystem of U.S. companies developing and manufacturing EVs is critical for the U.S. to maintain its long-term leadership in transportation.”

While this conditional commitment indicates DOE’s intent to finance the project, DOE and the company must satisfy certain technical, legal, environmental, and financial conditions before the Department of Energy enters into definitive financing documents and funds the loan.

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