Business World

Tesla moves into batteries for homes, businesses

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LOS ANGELES — Tesla Motors, Inc. on Thursday unveiled Tesla Energy — storage systems or batteries for homes, companies and utilities that will expand its business beyond electric vehicles and tap into a fastgrowin­g area of the energy industry.

Chief Executive Officer Elon Musk said the company’s goal was to “fundamenta­lly change the way the world uses energy on an extreme scale.” He introduced the products to a crowd of business partners and journalist­s at a Tesla facility near Los Angeles.

In Tesla’s view, such storage systems could become part of a fossil fuel-free lifestyle in which people can have solar panels on their roof generating electricit­y to power their home and recharge their electric car batteries.

The smallest battery unveiled on Thursday, known as Power- wall, is housed in a six-inch-wide container that is meant to be hung inside a garage or on the outside wall of a house.

At $ 3,500 for a 10- kilowattho­ur ( kWh) model, excluding inverter and installati­on prices, the Powerwall can be used for backup power or to store solar energy.

Tesla’s lead installati­on partner for the home battery will be Solar City Corp., the solar installer backed by Mr. Musk. The company will also partner with many others, Mr. Musk said.

Tesla has several hundred batteries installed with SolarCity systems in California already. The growth of those projects has been helped by a subsidy from California’s public utility regulator.

Utilities have also been seeking out energy storage to help manage increasing amounts of renewable energy on the grid. To address that market, Mr. Musk unveiled what he called the “power pack,” a 100-kWh battery block that is meant to help smooth out power from intermitte­nt solar and wind energy production or add energy to the grid quickly when demand levels are high.

Tesla already has several utility-scale batteries deployed on the grid in California, which requires its biggest utilities to source large amounts of energy storage.

Mr. Musk told reporters Tesla expected to have a low but growing gross margin in battery products in the fourth quarter of this year and added that battery products would be “materially profitable” some time next year.

“A cost effective home energy storage system it could prove far more valuable, and profitable, than anything the company is doing with automobile­s,” Karl Brauer, a senior analyst with auto industry research firm Kelley Blue Book, said.

Tesla will initially manufactur­e the batteries at its automobile factory in California but will move production to its planned “gigafactor­y” in Nevada next year.

Deutsche Bank estimated sales of stationary battery storage systems for homes and commercial uses could yield as much as $4.5 billion in revenue for Tesla. Analysts expect Tesla will build stationary storage systems around the same basic batteries it will produce for its vehicles at the large factory the company is building in Nevada.

Though valued at just $ 200 million in 2012, the energy storage industry is expected to grow to $19 billion by 2017, according to research firm IHS CERA. —

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