Biden leaves Seoul gifted with $10 bn investment pledge from Hyundai Motor

2022.05.22 13:56:23 | 2022.05.23 09:36:16

[Photo by Yonhap]À̹ÌÁö È®´ë

[Photo by Yonhap]

South Korea¡¯s Hyundai Motor Group on Sunday pledged investment of another $5 billion in high-tech areas of robotics, autonomous vehicle solutions, artificial intelligence, and urban aerial mobility in the United States through 2025 on top of $5.54 billion electric vehicle project in Georgia.

Group chairman Chung Euisun gifted the additional investment plan as he saw off President Joe Biden wrap up his three-day visit to South Korea a day after the Korean auto group announced a $5.54 billion contract to create an EV-devoted smart manufacturing facility in the state of Georgia and $1 billion by Hyundai partners for battery production infrastructure behind annual 300,000 vehicles when the complex is complete in 2025.

¡°Electric vehicles are good for our climate goals, but they¡¯re also good for jobs," Biden said. "And they¡¯re good for business.

"I am confident that this new plant in Georgia will help us become a leader in the America automobile industry with regards to building high quality electric vehicles for our U.S. customers," Chung told reporters appearing with Biden after a separate meeting.

Biden squeezed in the meeting with Chung before he left Seoul after devoting his first evening in Korea at a chip complex of Samsung Electronics which earlier this year pledged $17 billion foundry project in Texas.

Business topped the summit agenda along with ¡°extended deterrence¡± and enhanced military exercise scope against North Korean threat to underline a shift away from engaging policy towards Pyongyang and ambiguous stance amidst a hegemonic contest between the U.S. and China under South Korea¡¯s new conservative president Yoon Suk-yeol.

Yoon, a prosecutor-turned president two weeks into the new office with no international or political experience, and Biden redefined bilateral ties as a ¡°global comprehensive strategic alliance.¡± ¡°This partnership should go beyond security in Korea to include cutting-edge technology and global strategic partnership,¡± Yoon said.

Biden responded, ¡°Things have changed. There is a sense among the democracies in the Pacific that there¡¯s a need to cooperate much more closely. Not just militarily, but in terms of economically and politically.¡±

He skipped the usual stop to the demilitarized zone or U.S. army post to spend time with businessmen in Korea and briefly visit the Air Operations Center¡¯s Combat Operations before heading out to Tokyo for a summit of the Quadrilateral Security Dialogue.

By Pulse

[¨Ï Pulse by Maeil Business Newspaper & mk.co.kr, All rights reserved]