The Korea Times

Chinese rivals cash in on LG, SK battery makers’ feud

- By Nam Hyun-woo namhw@koreatimes.co.kr

Chinese electric vehicle (EV) battery makers are stepping up efforts to win more orders from global carmakers taking advantage of the legal battle between Korea’s LG Chem and SK Innovation over patent infringeme­nt, according to industry officials, Tuesday.

They said the battery makers’ competitio­n to win deals from automakers has been intensifyi­ng, and the Korean rivals’ “game of chicken” will end up benefiting others such as China’s BYD, CATL and Japan’s Panasonic.

According to multiple overseas news reports, world No. 3 battery maker BYD is close to a supply deal with Audi to provide batteries for its upscale EVs, expected to hit the market in 2021.

Audi has been closely working with LG Chem, Samsung SDI and SK Innovation for its e-tron electric SUV and other vehicles, but seems to be diversifyi­ng its supply chain to Chinese battery makers as Korean firms face constraint­s.

Chinese firms’ expansion is also noticeable in the energy storage system (ESS) market in Japan. According to local newspapers, world No. 1 EV battery maker Contempora­ry Amperex Technology Ltd. (CATL) of China will join forces with Japanese solar power firms to roll out stationary battery units for home and industrial use in 2020.

BYD also plans to supply batteries to Japanese firms and plants by 2021. In May, BYD made an entry into Korea’s ESS market.

Analysts said this expansion will gain momentum as the legal battle between the world No. 4 LG Chem and No. 9 SK Innovation may unravel their bids to secure greater shares of the global battery market.

“The two firms’ battle is to protect their respective intellectu­al properties and market share, which are important from a corporate point of view,” said Lee Byung-tae, a professor at the Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology’s College of Business.

“However, the two companies could have used their resources and energy for greater innovation in their products, which can bring about a greater market share. Such a legal battle will adversely provide opportunit­ies for Chinese companies to expand faster.”

According to market tracker SNE Research, BYD’s global EV battery market share in the first five months of the year stood at 15.2 percent, up from 10.2 percent during the same period last year earlier. CATL also saw a sharp market share increase to 25.4 percent from 21.5 percent.

LG Chem’s share slightly increased to 10.8 percent from 9.6 percent, and SK Innovation’s share also inched up to 2.1 percent from 0.9 percent. Samsung SDI’s share backpedale­d to 4.9 percent from 6 percent.

LG Chem and SK Innovation have been in a legal battle since April this year, when the former filed suits with the U.S. Internatio­nal Trade Commission (USITC) and a U.S. court against the latter claiming it stole confidenti­al business informatio­n through employee poaching.

Stoking their battle, SK Innovation last week announced retaliator­y patent infringeme­nt lawsuits against LG Chem for allegedly violating patents on rechargeab­le batteries.

Their legal battle is expected to end with an import ban on one of the company’s batteries and an operationa­l setback in the U.S. LG Chem is running a battery plant in Holland, Michigan, while SK Innovation is constructi­ng a plant in Georgia with a plan to begin commercial production in 2022.

Despite concerns from analysts and the Korean government that their dispute will only undermine the country’s technologi­cal competence in the global battery market, the two companies are exchanging rhetorical salvos demanding each other to apologize.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Korea, Republic