Electric Vehicles

TrueGreen, Nexport lay out $700m plan to make electric cars, buses and trucks in NSW

Published by

The Driven

Cleantech investment company TrueGreen and its electric bus subsidiary Nexport have announced a $700 million plan to create a new electric vehicle manufacturing industry in Australia,  based at a newly acquired site in NSW’s Southern Highlands.

TrueGreen, which describes itself as a “positive impact investment group”, and Nexport, which says it is the largest supplier of electric buses in Australia, says the initiative has been inspired by the NSW Liberal government’s goal to transition its bus fleet with the purchase of 8,000 electric buses.

But the new manufacturing facility – located on 51 hectares near Moss Vale – will not just make electric buses, it will also make electric cars, trucks and deliver vans and other cleantech products.

“TrueGreen and Nexport are planning to bring automotive manufacturing back to Australia with the next generation of cost effective electric vehicles,” Luke Todd, the CEO of both TrueGreen and Nexport  said in a statement ahead of the formal launch in Sydney on Monday.

“It’s vital to Australia’s long term future and prosperity that we look for advance cleantech manufacturing opportunities that we can export to other countries.

As noted on Friday by The Driven, TrueGreen is also the parent company of leading Australian electric bus manufacturer Gemilang which is supported by Nexport, a company that has, among other things, introduced an electric taxi service in Sydney’s Northern Beaches using Chinese EVs made by BYD.

Todd believes Australia can seal a prosperous future by embracing change and becoming a leader in clean technology innovation. In the transport sector, that change is being led by electric vehicles, even if there is only very thin support in Australia for the EV transition.

TrueGreen last month undertook a large stage one capital raising, and added a number of investors, including Nick Politis – the biggest shareholder in AP Eagers, Australia’s largest car dealership, and an institutional round of capital raising will be open to investors next month.

To read the full version of this story, please go to our EV-focussed sister site, The Driven and click here…

Bridie Schmidt is lead reporter for The Driven, sister site of Renew Economy. She specialises in writing about new technology, and has a keen interest in the role that zero emissions transport has to play in sustainability.

Bridie Schmidt

Bridie Schmidt is lead reporter for The Driven, sister site of Renew Economy. She specialises in writing about new technology, and has a keen interest in the role that zero emissions transport has to play in sustainability.

Share
Published by

Recent Posts

State’s stand-alone solar fail: The energy transition should deliver more than a new landlord

Western Power's stand-alone power system program is not an energy transition solution. It is a…

10 July 2026

Energy Insiders Podcast: Electric truck network starts to take shape

Electric trucks are suddenly big news in Australia. We catch up with NewVolt's Anthony Headlam…

10 July 2026

Watchdog warns spike in home battery complaints could damage consumer trust

Home batteries are flying off shelves and the consumer watchdog wants stronger protection to maintain…

10 July 2026

Offshore wind developers pray for bipartisan support ahead of key state election

Victoria's offshore wind developers are much more optimistic than they were a year ago, but…

10 July 2026

State utility bets on Australian-first compressed CO2 “energy dome,” with up to 12 hours of storage

Victoria's Latrobe Valley will soon host a ground-breaking long-duration energy storage facility capable of continuously…

10 July 2026

“It’s nuts:” Wind developer forced to truck giant transformer thousands of kilometres after port refusal

Renewable developer says the refusal of its closest port to handle a giant transformer has…

10 July 2026