Skip to content

Canada's Business and Tech Newsroom

  • Professional Subscription
  • Partnerships & Advertising
  • Licensing & Syndication
Log In Subscribe
Welcome,
  • My Account
  • Log Out
  • Business
  • Tech
  • National
  • The Big Read
  • Briefings
  • Commentary
Search
Log In Subscribe
Welcome,
  • My Account
  • Log Out
Shift newsletter

With foreign exchange, Stellantis and LG prepare for Canadian gigafactory launch

Canada is learning the LG way. 

When Canadian auto workers travelled to Japan in the late 1980s, they were schooled on the Toyota Way, a company playbook that not only transformed the world’s auto-assembly lines, but took over the wider corporate world. Even today, The Logic is among the companies using a kanban–esque tool: Trello. 

A similar transformation is underway this week in Windsor, Ont. NextStar Energy, a joint venture between Stellantis and LG Energy Solution that is building a $5-billion EV battery plant, began hiring a 130-person Canadian launch team that will spend months training at similar plants in Poland, China and South Korea. The team—30 finance, human resources and communications staff and 100 engineers and technicians—will help bring know-how to North America from Asia, where about 80 per cent of batteries are manufactured. 

Shift newsletter

With foreign exchange, Stellantis and LG prepare for Canadian gigafactory launch

Joint venture NextStar to send first 130 hires to train abroad

By Anita Balakrishnan
Ontario Premier Doug Ford, left, with federal Innovation Minister François-Philippe Champagne, right, along with members of Stellantis, LG Energy Solution and federal and provincial government officials. Photo: Windsor Star/Dan Janisse/Handout
Aug 3, 2023
A A
A Small A Medium A Large
Share

Share

Canada is learning the LG way. 

When Canadian auto workers travelled to Japan in the late 1980s, they were schooled on the Toyota Way, a company playbook that not only transformed the world’s auto-assembly lines, but took over the wider corporate world. Even today, The Logic is among the companies using a kanban–esque tool: Trello. 

A similar transformation is underway this week in Windsor, Ont. NextStar Energy, a joint venture between Stellantis and LG Energy Solution that is building a $5-billion EV battery plant, began hiring a 130-person Canadian launch team that will spend months training at similar plants in Poland, China and South Korea. The team—30 finance, human resources and communications staff and 100 engineers and technicians—will help bring know-how to North America from Asia, where about 80 per cent of batteries are manufactured. 

“The nature of the work that our people are doing on the floor as employees is significantly different from how the auto workers have been [working] on the vehicle-assembly line,” NextStar Energy CEO Danies Lee told me this week, adding that the quickly spreading knowledge is “a key advantage of LG being the first mover to the battery industry.” 

Related Articles

Gaps in U.S. rules targeting China may hurt Canadian EV firms, some warn

By Anita Balakrishnan

EVs spice up Canada’s long love affair with pickups

By Anita Balakrishnan

Lee said that while Toyota’s upheaval of the manufacturing sector honed operational excellence, the battery transition will be technical. It’s a nascent industry, with emerging techniques being shared from plant to plant. That means workers for Windsor’s new gigafactory will need an eye for patterns in data, and will need to learn, optimize and troubleshoot based on that, said Lee. 

If that sounds familiar, it should.

Lee’s hiring spree comes as the EV industry—and the overall economy—is shifting toward what economists call non-routine and cognitive work, which requires more decision-making and abstract thinking from workers. A 2022 report by the Information and Communications Technology Council and Propulsion Québec found that over 81 per cent of Tesla’s workforce is in this type of role, compared with 43.2 per cent of General Motors’s Ontario workforce.

John McNally, program director for Clean and Resilient Growth at the Smart Prosperity Institute, researches job transitions for clean-growth industries. He spoke with Windsor workers and educators at St. Clair College, which is preparing a training course with NextStar. He said the gigafactory floor could indeed look quite different than an engine plant—for example, it may have science lab-style clean rooms and may require some software fluency. 

But McNally said potential gigafactory workers shouldn’t be intimidated by computer-literacy issues. He said a manufacturing background could help workers get up to speed in as little as a week for some of the over 400 technician and 1,550 operator jobs for which NextStar will hire over the next few years. Still, McNally said, it would be useful for NextStar to share job descriptions now with both academic institutions and with organizations like Unifor, which is already retraining displaced auto workers from companies like Syncreon.

NextStar is under pressure to prove its worth in Canada, after halting the project to demand hikes to government subsidies that will now total up to $15 billion. Lee said that despite that halt, workers can depend on NextStar for the long haul, and that he wants to develop a talent ecosystem that will give people in-demand skills on which to build their careers.

“Sustainability—in terms of generating the right people with the right talent—that is a very important part,” he said.

Read Shift—The Logic’s authoritative weekly newsletter on automotive technology industry news—for more; and if you know someone who should be reading it, they can sign up here.

#batteries #electric vehicles #gigafactories #LG #NextStar Energy #Stellantis #talent #The Logic's Shift #Toyota

Loading...

Thanks for sharing!

You have shared 5 articles this month and reached the maximum amount of shares available.

Close
This account has reached its share limit.

If you would like to purchase a sharing license please contact The Logic support at [email protected].

Close
Want to share this article?

Upgrade to all-access now

Close
Gift the full article!

You have gifted 0 article(s) this month and have 5 remaining.

Copy link and gift
Copy Link
Email to a friend
Send Email
Gift on Social Media

Recipients will be able to read the full text of the article after submitting their email address. They will not have access to other articles or subscriber benefits.

Photo: Windsor Star/Dan Janisse/Handout

Most Popular This Week

Exclusive

PCO clerk Sabia stayed on Mastercard Foundation board for a year with no conflict screen

By Joanna Smith
Nakisa CEO Babak Varjavandi in a screencapture from the floor of a tech show. He's wearing a suit jacket and open-collared shirt.
News

Canadian firms are ready to help with digital sovereignty. Their challenge is getting approved

By Laura Osman
A shot of a small rocket sitting on a launch pad attached to its launch equipment. The backdrop is open sea and a light blue sky.
News

Canada’s submarine decision just paid off for Nova Scotia’s spaceport

By David Reevely
An aerial photo of Kearny mine, a mine surrounded by dense forest, with terraced rock walls that surround a deep blue body of water.
News

Canada bets on graphite as allies scramble for critical minerals

By Anita Balakrishnan

In-depth, agenda-setting reporting

Great journalism delivered straight to your inbox.

A shot of a sign bearing the Pfizer logo, with a lowrise office building in the background.
News

So far, foreign-owned firms have dominated Buy Canadian contracts

By Laura Osman

Briefing

Anthropic commits $10M worth of Claude to Canadian research centres

By Murad Hemmadi   |   Jul 14, 2026 | 3:36 PM ET

Thomson Reuters sells majority stake in book business for US$500M

By Anita Balakrishnan   |   Jul 14, 2026 | 3:13 PM ET

Sabia upholding ‘highest standards of integrity’ after double duty with Mastercard Foundation, PMO says

By David Reevely   |   Jul 14, 2026 | 2:19 PM ET

Best business newsletter in Canada

Get up to speed in minutes with insights and analysis on the most important stories of the day, every weekday.

Exclusive events

See the bigger picture with reporters and industry experts in subscriber-exclusive events.

Membership in The Logic Council

Membership provides access to our popular Slack channel, participation in subscriber surveys and invitations to exclusive events with our journalists and special guests.

Recent Popular Stories

Commentary: Quebec Ink

Quebec’s era of endless, cheap electricity is coming to an end

By Martin Patriquin   |   Jul 6, 2026
A cityscape featuring two tall buildings; the right one has a large orange "Q" logo and a Quebec flag atop. The sky is clear and blue.
Exclusive

PCO clerk Sabia stayed on Mastercard Foundation board for a year with no conflict screen

By Joanna Smith   |   Jul 13, 2026
News

Canada’s submarine decision just paid off for Nova Scotia’s spaceport

By David Reevely   |   Jul 8, 2026
A shot of a small rocket sitting on a launch pad attached to its launch equipment. The backdrop is open sea and a light blue sky.
News

Canada bets on graphite as allies scramble for critical minerals

By Anita Balakrishnan   |   Jul 7, 2026
An aerial photo of Kearny mine, a mine surrounded by dense forest, with terraced rock walls that surround a deep blue body of water.
News

Meta to spend $13B on sprawling Alberta data-centre complex

By Meghan Potkins   |   Jul 8, 2026
An aerial-style rendering of a massive data centre on a prairie landscape of farm fields and trees.
News

Alberta wants to be a model for government AI and power Canada-wide adoption

By Murad Hemmadi   |   Jul 10, 2026
A shot of Nate Glubish at a lectern, against a backdrop of exposed brick partly covered by a white film screen.

Canada's most influential executives and policymakers are reading The Logic

  • CPP Investments
  • Sun Life Financial
  • C100
  • Amazon
  • Telus
  • Mastercard
  • bdc
  • Shopify
  • Rogers
  • RBC
  • General Motors
  • MaRS
  • Government of Canada
  • Uber
  • Loblaw Companies Limited
logic-logo

Canada's Business and Tech Newsroom

100% human-crafted journalism

Newsroom

  • News Tips
  • AI Policy
  • Editorial Disclosures
  • Story Pitches

Company

  • About Us
  • Terms of Service
  • Privacy Statement
  • Corporate Information

Contact

  • Contact Us
  • Advertise
  • FAQs
  • Work at The Logic

© 2026 The Logic Inc. All Rights Reserved.

Trusted by leaders

Error

Account creation failed.

Please email us at [email protected].

Create Account

[wppb-register form_name=”cozmo-registration-form-for-modal”]

I do have an account
Login
or

[wppb-login]

I don’t have an account