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2010 07

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Grants aim to rev alternative vehicle technology

President Barack Obama, Vice President Joe Biden and other administration officials took to separate stages nationwide Wednesday to announce $2.4 billion in federal grants to develop next-generation electric vehicles and batteries.

It was dramatic way for the president’s team to jump start the biggest bet yet on a future free from — or at least far less dependent on — fossil fuels. Biden made the case from the home of the hard-hit U.S. auto industry.

“The ultimate success of electric cars relies on better batteries, better drive-trains, reducing carbon emissions, making alternative energy more available,” Biden told a crowd of about 300 in Detroit outside NextEnergy, a nonprofit that works with businesses on research involving alternative and renewable energy.

“If we fail to invest, virtually none of that market will be in the U.S. … We have a tremendous opportunity here — right here in Detroit — to invest in our vehicle fleet, shifting toward electrification.”

The grants will be split among nearly 50 projects in 25 states, with the biggest shares going to Indiana and Michigan to create job opportunities in the automotive industry.

Recipients include Johnson Controls Inc., of Milwaukee, $299 million to build battery packs and cells for hybrid vehicles at a facility in Holland, Michigan; General Motors Co., $241 million to produce battery packs and the develop electric drive vehicles in Michigan and Maryland; and Ford Motor Co., $92.7 million for electric drive components at plants in Michigan and Missouri.

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