Fancy a rechargeable G Wagon? All Mercedes-Benz cars will have electrified versions by 2022.

By 2022, there will be electrified versions of all the cars made by Mercedes-Benz, according to Daimler AG, the parent company of Mercedes-Benz. This will be achieved under the new EQ sub-brand.

To achieve this, the company is pouring $1 billion into a 20-year-old factory in Alabama, USA. A 1-million-square-foot expansion will be added, with construction starting in 2018 and vehicle production expected to start in the early 2020s. Verge reported that Daimler is still hashing out details with the local governments, but the move is expected to create about 600 new jobs.

The Mercedes-Benz plant in Alabama mostly builds SUVs, so the company will focus on producing the electrified versions of those vehicles. And it’s important to remember here that “electrified” doesn’t necessarily mean “all-electric.” While some vehicles built at the Tuscaloosa plant will likely be all-electric, “electrified” refers to anything that uses an electric motor, meaning hybrids are included in that term as well.

Mercedes will also build batteries in another new addition to the facility. That will give the company valuable proximity to the vehicle production line, but also could help it compete with Tesla in another new section of the energy market that it’s been testing lately: home batteries.

Daimler is not the first major automaker to make a big push for electric vehicles. Ford announced a $4.5 billion investment into EV production back in 2015, Volkswagen announced a similar effort one year later while under pressure for its emissions scandal, and many other automakers have since followed suit as countries around the world move to ban or reduce the number of cars powered by fossil fuels. But there’s a long way to go to reach that goal. Combined, electric and hybrid vehicles made up just under 3 percent of cars sold in the US in 2016.

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