China Daily Global Edition (USA)

DSM arm’s novel tech boosts e-vehicles

- By ZHONG NAN zhongnan@chinadaily.com.cn

The automobile body materials subsidiary of Royal DSM, the Dutch life and material sciences company, has found novel ways to enhance mileage and quality of batterypow­ered vehicles in China.

By working closely with Chinese manufactur­ers and related electric vehicle industry associatio­ns, DSM Engineerin­g Plastics or DEP has figured that if e-vehicles are built using lightweigh­t yet sturdy materials, they can travel a longer distance.

Lighter e-cars also improve the endurance of the battery, said Zhang Zhenyu, commercial director of DEP for Great China region.

Agreed Zhao Ying, a researcher at the Beijingbas­ed Institute of Industrial Economics, which is part of the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences. “Lightweigh­t vehicles are a significan­t trend in new energy vehicles. They can reduce the use of battery. Advanced materials and technology are key to lightweigh­t vehicles and lower cost of production.”

That is where DEP assumes significan­ce. It specialize­s in the manufactur­e of plastics for electronic­s, automotive and specialize­d industries.

“We are working on lightweigh­t materials with manufactur­ers in China and abroad, and trying to understand what they need now and what they might need in the future,” DEP’s Zhang said.

In this direction, the company has made progress. It has been able to make lighter engines, chassis and power assist systems, as well as decrease the friction between the chains. This has helped increase efficiency and reduce carbon emissions.

DEP has gained another insight in China. “For traditiona­l vehicles, we consider most the heat resistance of materials. But now, we concentrat­e more on the flame retardancy and insulation performanc­e for the batteries and

We are working on lightweigh­t materials with manufactur­ers in China and abroad, and trying to understand what they need now and what they might need in the future.”

Zhang Zhenyu, new requiremen­ts for emerging applicatio­ns,” Zhang said.

Production capacity of parent DSM’s engineerin­g plastics production line in Jiangyin, Jiangsu province, has surpassed 10 million metric tons, he said.

Encouraged by the success so far and to secure more resources, DEP is on the lookout for possible targets for mergers and acquisitio­ns in the field, Zhang said.

More so because the field of traditiona­l engines has always been DEP’s stronghold. The shrinking volume of traditiona­l vehicles will force DEP to seek new growth points in the new energy vehicle industry, he said.

In engineerin­g plastics, DEP already has a joint venture with Zhejiang NHU Special Materials Co. The venture was establishe­d last year.

Underling that China is the world’s biggest market for new energy vehicles, Zhang said the country’s renewable automotive sector is growing fast.

Earlier this year, the Ministry of Industry and Informatio­n Technology said the country is aiming to achieve an annual production capacity of 2 million new energy vehicles by 2020.

A quarter of vehicles sold in China by 2025 will be powered by alternativ­e energy.

“We have seen a dramatic leap in China, which has a very ambitious goal in new energy cars. It’ll post a new challenge for the materials required,” Zhang said.

“From charging point to charging gun, and now to highvoltag­e connector, the change in the circuit system has posted new requiremen­ts for the materials used,” he added.

So, DEP will hire more profession­als toward research and developmen­t of intelligen­t lightweigh­t materials over the next five years, Zhang said.

DEP’s global network of R&D centers spans India, China, Germany, the Netherland­s and the United States.

“If our China department proposes a project but lacks related talents, we can support them from the Netherland­s or other labs in the world,” Zhang said.

He saw fresh challenges arising on the technology front as well.

“Digitaliza­tion is starting to take control of many parts of cars and we have seen many clients growing interest in the digital control,” he said.

commercial director of DSM Engineerin­g Plastics for Great China region

 ?? BLOOMBERG ?? Technician­s monitor data on PC screens in a laboratory at the Royal DSM NV site in Delft, the Netherland­s.
BLOOMBERG Technician­s monitor data on PC screens in a laboratory at the Royal DSM NV site in Delft, the Netherland­s.

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