Samuelsson, 70, will remain chairman of EV maker Polestar

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Volvo Volvo's new boss, Jim Rowan, was CEO of Dyson between 2017 and 2020 and COO from 2012 to 2017.

STOCKHOLM -- Volvo Cars has hired former Dyson Group executive Jim Rowan as its new CEO to succeed Hakan Samuelsson.

Rowan was Dyson's CEO between 2017 and 2020 when the British tech company was developing an electric car, an idea it later dropped. Before working at Dyson, Rowan was COO at BlackBerry maker Research In Motion.

The 56-year-old Scottish executive will succeed Samuelsson, 70, on March 21, Volvo said in a statement on Tuesday.

Rowan is currently CEO at U.S-based consumer electronics brand Ember Technologies, a job he has held for less than a year. He is taking over just months after Volvo wrapped up its IPO, the biggest in Europe last year.

Rowan will face the task of steering the Swedish automaker, which is majority owned by China's Geely Holding, toward its goal of getting half of its global sales from full-electric cars by mid-decade and be an electric-only brand by 2030.

Volvo said Rowan's global experience in digitalization, disruption, innovation, engineering and supply chains will be valuable for the automaker to realize its strategic ambitions.

Samuelsson will remain as chairman of electric vehicle maker Polestar.

Samuelsson joined Volvo's board in 2010 and has been CEO at the automaker for almost 10 years, with his contract coming to an end this year.

Polestar, in which Volvo owns 49 percent, aims to go public through a reverse merger with special-purpose acquisition company (SPAC) Gores Guggenheim. The deal is expected to close in the first half of 2022.

Rowan was Dyson CEO from 2017 to 2020 and chief operating officer from 2012 to 2017. During his time at Dyson, Rowan delivered record growth and financial results for Dyson, according to Volvo's release.

Rowan worked for Research In Motion as COO from 2008-2012. During the period the company boosted revenue to $20 billion from $5 billion.

From 1998 to 2005 he was vice president of operations at Flextronics, a $25 billion global manufacturing company with more than 200,000 employees at more than 100 factories worldwide.

Rowan was born in Glasgow. He studied mechanical and production engineering and electrical and electronic engineering at Glasgow Caledonian University and Glasgow School of Technology. He holds a master's degree in business with supply chain management and logistics from Northumbria University, northern England.

Reuters contributed to this report