The move follows a letter of intent signed between the three parties in March as the joint venture seeks to pool resources to work on hybrid technology and synthetic fuels to power 80 per cent of the global internal combustion engine and hybrid market, the companies said in a statement on Tuesday.
Renault has been revamping its corporate structure to tackle the shift to electric vehicles (EVs) and bolster profits. As part of that plan, the company last year merged its combustion assets with Geely’s to amass scale and cut costs. The new entity, dubbed Horse by Renault, started operating this month.
The maker of Clio cars and Geely will each hold 50 per cent equity stakes in the new project, which will establish its headquarters in the United Kingdom. Regional hubs in Madrid and Hangzhou in China will operate in the meantime. The venture, which does not have an official name yet, will have 17 plants and 19,000 employees, and the capacity to supply more than 5 million internal combustion, hybrid and plug-in hybrid engines annually.
The transaction is expected to be completed in the second half of this year, subject to approval from antitrust and foreign-direct-investment authorities.