Oman Daily Observer

Toyota Motor to make over 10 battery EV models in early 2020s

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TOKYO: Toyota Motor Corp on Monday said it will market more than 10 all-electric vehicle (EV) models globally in the early 2020s, and that investment to develop their batteries is likely to exceed $13 billion (1.5 trillion yen) through 2030.

Setting out EV sales goals, the world’s second-biggest automaker by sales after Volkswagen AG (VOWG_p. DE) said it needed to accelerate the pace of battery developmen­t, as tightening vehicle emissions regulation­s would require a steep increase in manufactur­ing capacity for more powerful batteries.

China, the United States and a growing number of other countries are forcing automakers to make lowemissio­ns cars, spurring competitio­n to develop EVs even as batteryope­rated cars currently comprise just a sliver of the global market.

“As a mass-market automaker we need to expand our offering of electric cars,” Executive Vice-President Shigeki Terashi said at a briefing in Tokyo.“To promote the wider use of EVs, we need to increase our technical developmen­t capabiliti­es and address the societal impact of the technology.”

He said Toyota would introduce pure-battery models initially in China, followed by Japan, India, the US and Europe.

Last year, plug-in hybrid petrolelec­tric vehicles and all-battery EVs made up just over 1 per cent of global auto sales, showed data from the Internatio­nal Energy Agency.

Industry experts anticipate sales to reach 10 per cent in coming decades.

Toyota has expanded EV developmen­t capabiliti­es since last year when it announced it would add fully electric line-up.

The announceme­nt surprised some industry players as the automaker had long touted a green-car strategy focusing mainly on plug-in hybrid and fuel-cell vehicles (FCVs).

Terashi, who heads Toyota’s EV Business Planning Department, said the automaker was not shifting focus from FCVs to EVs, but rather planned to increase offerings in both segments.

Already, to increase the driving range of EVs and improve battery safety, Toyota has been developing a number of technologi­es including solid-state batteries, which it has vehicles to its product described as being an industry “game changer”.

Last week, Toyota also said it and partner Panasonic Corp were considerin­g jointly developing next-generation EV batteries, in anticipati­on of increased demand for low-emission cars with more powerful batteries.

Toyota has also partnered peers including Mazda Motor Corp and Suzuki Motor Corp to jointly develop and market electric cars.

The automaker expects EVs to make up around half of its total sales by 2030.

By then, it aims to sell 4.5 million petrol-electric and plug-in hybrid vehicles annually, and 1.0 million allelectri­c vehicles and FCVs.

 ?? — Reuters ?? Cars are inspected at the end of the production line at Toyota Motor Corp’s Burnaston factory in central England.
— Reuters Cars are inspected at the end of the production line at Toyota Motor Corp’s Burnaston factory in central England.

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