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Toyota plans long-range, fast-charging electric car

Group aims to sell new electric vehicle as early as 2022 in Japan

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TOKYO: Toyota Motor Corp is working on an electric car powered by a new type of battery that significan­tly increases driving range and reduces charging time, aiming to begin sales in 2022, the Chunichi

Shimbun daily reported. Toyota’s new electric car, to be built on an all-new platform, would use all-solid-state batteries, allowing it to be recharged in just a few minutes, the newspaper said, without citing sources.

By contrast, current electric vehicles (EVs), which use lithium-ion batteries, need 20-30 minutes to recharge even with fast chargers and typically have a range of just 300-400 km.

Toyota has decided to sell the new model in Japan as early as 2022, the paper said.

Toyota spokeswoma­n Kayo Doi said the company would not comment on specific product plans but added that it aimed to commercial­ise all-solid-state batteries by the early 2020s.

Japan’s biggest automaker is looking to close the gap with EV leaders such as Nissan Motor Co and Tesla Inc as battery-powered cars gain traction around the globe as a viable emission-free alternativ­e to convention­al cars.

Whether Toyota will be able to leapfrog its rivals remains to be seen, however, as mass production requires a far more stringent level of quality control and reliabilit­y.

“There’s a pretty long distance between the lab bench and manufactur­ing,” said CLSA auto analyst Christophe­r Richter.

“2022 is ages away, and a lot can change in the meantime.” How quickly the new EVs will catch on would also depend largely on battery costs.

Having long touted hydrogen fuel-cell vehicles and plug-in hybrids as the most sensible technology to make cars greener, Toyota last year said it wanted to add longrange EVs to its line-up, and set up a new in-house unit, headed by President Akio Toyoda, to develop and market EVs.

Toyota is reportedly planning to begin mass-producing EVs in China, the world’s biggest auto market, as early as in 2019, although that model would be based on the existing C-HR sport utility vehicle and use lithium-ion batteries. Other automakers such as BMW are also working on developing all-solid-state batteries, eyeing mass production in the next 10 years.

Solid-state batteries use solid electrolyt­es rather than liquid ones, making them safer than lithium-ion batteries currently on the market.

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 ??  ?? New technology: A man plugs a charger cable into Toyota’s i-Road electric vehicle in Tokyo. Toyota’s new electric car, to be built on an all-new platform, will use all-solid-state batteries. — Reuters
New technology: A man plugs a charger cable into Toyota’s i-Road electric vehicle in Tokyo. Toyota’s new electric car, to be built on an all-new platform, will use all-solid-state batteries. — Reuters

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