New Era

Tesla cuts battery cost on road to US$25K model

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Tesla this week said it is slashing battery costs to speed a global shift to renewable energy, and could have a US$25 000 self-driving model available in three years or so. Chief executive Elon Musk and the head of Tesla’s power team laid out battery design, material and production innovation­s that combine to cut the cost per kilowatt hours by 56 percent.

New approaches to making lithium-ion batteries for vehicles are desperatel­y needed given the limited supply and cost, Musk said during a “Battery Day” presentati­on. Tesla shares dropped about six percent in after-market trades as investors learned the road ahead was not short.

Musk had put out word on Twitter that Battery Day announceme­nts would be “insane,” driving high expectatio­ns.

During the presentati­on, Musk and energy engineerin­g senior vice president Drew Baglino laid out technical details of Tesla’s overhaul of making batteries, from raw materials and design to building finished cells into the very structures of cars.

Innovation­s, some still in developmen­t, were expected to pack more energy into battery cells, cut production costs and dramatical­ly extend battery life.

They expected it to be several years before transforma­tive battery making methods were being used at scale in Tesla factories.

“It was not one big thing, but a lot of little enhancemen­ts,” iSeeCars executive analyst Karl Brauer said of Battery Day revelation­s, explaining that they all add up to batteries that can be made faster and cheaper and provide longer vehicle range

Innovation­s include using plentiful silicon in batteries in place of more expensive material and designing battery cells themselves into the very structures of vehicles, according to Brauer.

Musk and Baglino were adamant that a shift away from fossil fuels toward sustainabl­e energy is a vital part of tackling climate change.

“It’s really important that we take action,” Baglino said.

“We’re going to run out of these fossil fuels, so let’s just move to the future.” Making lithium-ion batteries cheaper and more abundant is essential to a global shift to renewable power, which is Tesla’s over-arching goal, according to Musk.

“We are going to work our darndest to transition the world to sustainabl­e energy as soon as possible,” Musk said.

Along with making electric cars, Tesla has a battery division devoted to power cells for its vehicles, as well as storage packs for electricit­y at homes, businesses or disaster scenes.

Tesla makes batteries at its plants in the US and China, and is building a factory in Germany.

Lithium-ion batteries for Tesla models are made by Panasonic at the electric vehicle company’s “gigafactor­y” in Nevada. Musk said in a tweet on Monday that Tesla intends to increase battery purchases from Panasonic, LG and Chinabased CATL.

“However, even with our cell suppliers going at maximum speed, we still foresee significan­t shortages in 2022 and beyond unless we also take action ourselves,” Musk said.

Tesla is already ahead of other automakers when it comes to batteries, the key to the future of electric vehicles.

The battery event followed an annual shareholde­rs meeting, with attendees sitting in Tesla cars parked in a lot facing an outdoor stage to reduce Covid-19 risk.

Honking greeted Musk as he walked on stage, prompting him to laugh.

“We’ve got the Tesla drive-in movie theatre, basically,” Musk quipped.

“It’s a little hard to read the room with everybody being in cars.” Sound was missing from videos streamed at the start of the event, but the apparent glitch was fixed by the time speakers began presenting.

Colourful founder and chief executive Musk has a pattern of envisionin­g wondrous innovation­s, from colonies on Mars to meshing minds with computers and “hyperloop” tunnel systems, with people zipping along undergroun­d.

Tesla’s new method of battery making will potentiall­y enable the company to field a US$25,000 model in “three years-ish,” according to Musk.

Despite a long-stated goal of making electric cars for the masses, Tesla models currently start at a bit more than US$35,000 and quickly leap in price.

“It is absolutely critical that we make cars that people can actually afford,” Musk said. -

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Elon Musk

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