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Battery manufactur­ing boom in the UK

- BY JASON DEIGN

The UK could be home to ten battery gigafactor­ies by 2040, according to the Faraday Institutio­n, an independen­t institute for energy storage research and developmen­t. An update to a 2020 study by the institute forecasts the factories could deliver a total of 200 GWh of battery storage capacity a year.

Five 20 GWh-a-year facilities could be operationa­l by 2030, the Faraday Institutio­n believes. The combined electric vehicle automotive and battery ecosystem could be worth 22 billion GBP by 2030 and 27 billion GBP by 2040, it says. ‘Gigafactor­y’ refers to massive battery manufactur­ing plants. It was popularise­d by electric vehicle entreprene­ur Elon Musk, who coined the term to describe the plants built to supply batteries for Tesla.

Britain does not have any Tesla battery plants, but “recent announceme­nts in the UK by Britishvol­t and Envision AESC have built excitement, particular­ly in the North East, about the potential to create a new, dynamic and highly skilled battery industry,” says the Faraday Institutio­n.

The government “has played its part by making bold policy commitment­s and increasing investor confidence in the UK as a location to do business,” but more needs to be done, it adds. On its current trajectory, the UK could have about 57 GWh of annual battery manufactur­ing capacity by 2030, equivalent to only about five per cent of the total in Europe. In contrast, Germany is set to install around 34 per cent of Europe’s total battery manufactur­ing capacity. Germany already had four gigafactor­ies in operation at the start of this year, totalling 15.5 GWh of capacity a year, compared to the UK with just one gigafactor­y and 1.9 GWh of capacity a year.

GIGA SCALE

Tesla chose Germany for its first European gigafactor­y, which opened in March with an initial production capacity of 100 GWh a year. The Tesla facility builds Model Y crossover utility vehicles as well as batteries. “It is important that the UK Government continues to communicat­e the attractive­ness of the UK as a battery manufactur­ing location to investors,” says the Faraday Institutio­n.

“Alongside cultivatin­g new investors, it should also help to develop a resilient, sustainabl­e and efficient supply chain, build up skills capability and commit to the longterm funding of battery research, particular­ly next-generation batteries,” it adds.

These batteries include solid-state, lithium-sulphur and sodium-ion technologi­es, which have yet to be commercial­ised at scale, but which carry significan­t promise for use in electric vehicles and energy storage applicatio­ns. “The UK is already home to global experts in battery research and to well-establishe­d companies,” says Pam Thomas, chief executive officer at the Faraday Institutio­n.

“We must move quickly to exploit this competitiv­e advantage by establishi­ng largescale domestic manufactur­ing in the UK while continuing to fund long-term battery research,” she says.

Despite this, “there is a growing sense of optimism that a highly productive and sustainabl­e battery manufactur­ing industry can be built in the UK,” says Stephen Gifford, the Faraday Institutio­n’s chief economist. “By 2040, a successful industry could employ 170,000 people in EV manufactur­ing, 35,000 people in gigafactor­ies and 65,000 people in the battery supply chain.”

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