Tariff Response: Polestar 3 Production Begins in South Carolina

Chris Teague
by Chris Teague

The U.S. government recently announced severe tariffs on Chinese-built vehicles, reaching 100 percent in some cases. While some of the staggering number of Chinese automakers have expressed no interest in selling here, some of the United States’ more recognizable auto brands are owned by companies in the country, including Volvo and Polestar. Both are owned by Geely, a Chinese corporation, but to get around tariffs on the upcoming Polestar 3, the automaker has moved production of the electric SUV to Volvo’s factory in South Carolina.


The Carolina-built Polestar 3 will be sold in the U.S. and Europe, and company CEO Thomas Ingenlath told Reuters, “If you look at the bulk of volume that we will produce of the Polestar 3, of course, the majority of that volume will be here coming out of the South Carolina factory.” He didn’t detail production volumes but said that the factory would reach full capacity within two months.  


Polestar joins Volvo and other automakers in localizing vehicle production to cope with tariffs and tax credit eligibility. Hyundai and Kia have begun building EVs at their U.S. factories to open eligibility for up to $7,500 in federal tax credits. Volvo will build its new EX90 SUV in South Carolina, though software hiccups and other delays have tarnished its rollout.

Chinese-built EVs may eventually make it here, though it’s unclear how or if they’d get on under the harsh tariffs. Their low prices have made them attractive in global markets, but a 100 percent tariff would put a quick end to that trend here. That said, Chinese companies are making inroads in Canada and Mexico, so it could only be a matter of time before they arrive in the States.


[Images: Polestar]


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Chris Teague
Chris Teague

Chris grew up in, under, and around cars, but took the long way around to becoming an automotive writer. After a career in technology consulting and a trip through business school, Chris began writing about the automotive industry as a way to reconnect with his passion and get behind the wheel of a new car every week. He focuses on taking complex industry stories and making them digestible by any reader. Just don’t expect him to stay away from high-mileage Porsches.

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  • Probert Probert on Aug 18, 2024
    The billions being invested in EV and battery factories began before tarrifs were announced. The creation of 10s of thousands of jobs and a massive new tax base, while creating supply lines for strategic materials and making incursions into Chinese hegemony in this realm - is the outcome of the Biden/Harris IRA Bill which got zero GOP votes. Smart policy is the way you establish yourself in the world: smart investment in your country, and its work force. It works better than insulting people and taking payoffs at the back door.
  • Mike Mike on Aug 19, 2024
    They will sell hundreds of these so called polestars.
  • Kevin I traded in my 2022 Civic Si after a year and this is one factor. It is Sep. 24 and still no recall, just a TSB so Honda can sweep it under the rug.This plus a terrible engine/tuning, bad safety tech, missing features, and the most rattling interior I've ever heard ensured I won't be buying another Honda ever again and I've loved Honda since the 2000's. They are not the same brand, or they are the same but cars are more complicated so the cracks really show now. Either way people were also having steering issues with the 10th gen civics also and Honda ignored them. Don't buy a Honda please. Everything about my Si besides the handling felt like a beta car, not a complete product.
  • 1995 SC Blazer
  • Jalop1991 you know, I can't help but remember the Dilbert cartoon where Dilbert commented to the janitor about how Dilbert has two cans under his desk, one for trash and one for recycling, but he's noticed that the janitor who comes around at night has only one large can. This is all smoke and mirrors. Mark my words, we will see stories down the road about place like this taking the recycling fees and dumping the batteries in a pit in some third world country.
  • Arthur Dailey Forget the 90`s. The cars and their names were largely forgettable. Bring back real car names. Wildcat. Riviera. Spitfire. Interceptor. Pinto (as someone else noted). Corvair. Speedwagon. Matador. Imperial. de Ville. Or even better Packard, Hudson, Studebaker, De Soto and Dusenberg. If VW can resurrect the Bugatti name, then why not?
  • Macmcmacmac Aztec.
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