Hyundai Motor's head of sales innovation group Andy Kang with a Hyundai Ioniq 5 bearing 'EVS 1L' plate.
After a delay partly owing to the Covid-19 pandemic, South Korean vehicle manufacturer Hyundai Motor's assembly plant in Singapore will start rolling out the electric Ioniq 5 in the first half of this year.
To mark the occasion, the company will hold a charity auction for the number plates of its first 100 cars assembled in Singapore.
These cars will bear special number plates with the EVS prefix, which stands for EV made in Singapore.
The company hopes to raise $400,000 for charity.
The Hyundai Motor Group Innovation Centre in Jurong, the site of Singapore's first vehicle assembly plant in more than 40 years, is expected to be completed in April, said Mr Andy Kang, Hyundai Motor's Head of Sales Innovation Group.
It was originally slated to be completed last November.
Mr Kang told The Straits Times on Wednesday that the plant will initially import the car's fully painted body shell from its newly opened factory in Indonesia, with all other parts shipped in from South Korea.
He added that Hyundai is looking to source parts from Singapore automotive component makers once its production volume ramps up.