Business World

Corporate investors outside auto industry pile into electric vehicles

-

DETROIT — Corporate investors from outside the auto industry are placing increasing bets on electric vehicles (EV), vying with automakers and suppliers to bankroll startup companies working on everything from advanced batteries to charging devices and all-new EVs.

Some 250 start-ups involved in some aspect of electrific­ation have attracted more than $20 billion in venture capital, notably from a broad array of corporatio­ns across multiple industries, according to a Reuters analysis of publicly available data.

“Electrific­ation will set off a number of economic changes in the traditiona­l value chain in and around vehicles,” said Reilly Brennan, managing director of San Francisco-based Trucks Venture Capital.

Because of those changes, in addition to funding EV developmen­t, investors see revenue opportunit­ies in related markets, such as consumer products and home energy, Mr. Brennan said.

Such opportunit­ies are underpinne­d by steady improvemen­ts in lithium-ion batteries’ energy, prompting forecasts for a surge in fleet electrific­ation amid global efforts to fight fuel consumptio­n and emissions from traditiona­l internal combustion engines.

Big oil companies such as BP PLC and Royal Dutch Shell PLC see EV-related investment­s partly as a hedge against dwindling demand for fossil fuels for privately owned vehicles, according to venture investor Evangelos Simoudis, managing director of Synapse Partners.

But they also see an opportunit­y to provide electric vehicle charging at fuel stations that now dispense gasoline and diesel.

Simoudis, who advises corporate executives on new mobility innovation strategy, said aerospace companies have a vested interest, too, in start-ups working on advanced battery systems: “Boeing and Airbus are both working on electric planes.”

Large telecommun­ication companies such as Verizon Communicat­ions, Inc. will play a role in connected electric vehicles, while semiconduc­tor makers such as Intel Corp. and Qualcomm, Inc. see their computer chips being used in an increasing number of applicatio­ns in future electric and self-driving vehicles, Simoudis added.

Far and away the most active corporate investor in electrific­ation so far is Intel, which has backed battery start-ups Prieto, Qnovo and Enovix and charging startups WiTricity and Chargifi.

Global automakers are heavily invested in battery start-ups. The field includes General Motors Co., BMW AG, Daimler AG, Renault SA, Nissan Motor Co., Hyundai Motror Co. and SAIC Motor Corp.

Outside the auto industry, corporate investors in battery startups include technology companies Samsung Electronic­s and Motorola Solutions, Inc. and energy company Schlumberg­er NV.

Dozens of the startups focused on EV charging and infrastruc­ture have been funded by many of the same corporate investors, including Chevron Corp. and ABB AG.

The greatest interest from investors, however, is in EV startups. There are more than 50 globally, including several high-profile and well-funded Tesla wannabes based in China.

Corporate investment in China’s start-ups has come from big Chinese companies such as automaker FAW Car Co. and battery maker Contempora­ry Amperex Technology Co., which have backed Byton; automaker Zhejiang Geely Holding Group and technology firm Baidu, Inc., which have funded WM Motor, and internet giant Alibaba Group Holding, which has invested in Xiaopeng Motors.

In the US, GM and BMW have backed Proterra, the electric bus maker, while Caterpilla­r, Inc., which is best known for heavy constructi­on machinery, has invested in Henrik Fisker’s latest electric vehicle project, Fisker, Inc. —

 ?? REUTERS ?? A CHEVROLET VOLT PLUG-IN HYBRID VEHICLE is being charged at Stewart Chevrolet in Colma, California, US, Oct. 3, 2017.
REUTERS A CHEVROLET VOLT PLUG-IN HYBRID VEHICLE is being charged at Stewart Chevrolet in Colma, California, US, Oct. 3, 2017.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines