Tesla is likely to get a year-end revenue boost from helping Jaguar Land Rover meet European Union rules governing greenhouse gas emissions from cars and SUVs.
The U.S. automaker intends to pool the fleet of electric vehicles it sells in the EU with vehicles that Jaguar Land Rover delivers to customers, according to a filing on the European Commission’s website.
JLR is joining Honda, which reached a pooling deal with Tesla roughly a year ago.
A representative for JLR did not immediately comment on the filing. The UK automaker provisioned 35 million pounds ($48 million) for fines from failing to meet EU rules last year and had previously said it expected to meet its target for carbon-dioxide emissions this year.
Independent auto analyst Matthias Schmidt reported on the filing earlier Tuesday.
Tesla has generated billions in revenue by helping automakers comply with stricter emissions regulations, including about $1.15 billion in the first nine months of this year. The automaker does not specify how much of the revenue is coming from particular manufacturers or give regional breakdowns.
Stellantis, the automaker formed through the merger of PSA Group and Fiat Chrysler, said in May that it was exiting Tesla’s EU emissions pool. Before the company ended the pooling pact early, one analyst noted that Fiat Chrysler was effectively funding the factory Tesla is building in Germany.