San Francisco Chronicle

Battery industry has fast evolution

- By Anna Hirtenstei­n

Some of the latest battery technologi­es may become obsolete before reaching the market because of the breakneck pace of advances in the industry.

Teams of scientists from San Francisco to Shenzhen are experiment­ing with chemical processes to improve the traditiona­l lithium-ion cell and find new ways to bottle up electricit­y for use at another time. Investors in those projects are starting to worry that they might have picked the wrong technology.

That’s turning the debate about so-called stranded assets on its head. To date, the term has been deployed to refer to fossil fuel projects that may turn unprofitab­le as pollution regulation­s tighten. In the future, upheaval in the way energy storage devices are made mean that investment­s in batteries may turn unprofitab­le even though they’re at the heart of transformi­ng the way the energy system works.

Investment into startups developing new types of batteries rose to more than $1.5 billion in the first half of the year, almost twice the level in 2017, according to data from Cleantech Group.

Carmakers Volkswagen, Hyundai and Renault-Nissan-Mitsubishi have all channeled funds into battery companies. Japan’s New Energy & Industrial Technology Developmen­t Organizati­on has announced that it will spend $90 million on researchin­g solid-state devices with a group of universiti­es and manufactur­ers.

“There is a tremendous amount of money being put into battery research right now, and eventually that will lead to evolution of technology,” said Peter Carlsson, founder and CEO of NorthVolt, a Stockholm

company that’s constructi­ng a $4.6 billion battery manufactur­ing facility in the Nordic region. “We are building a manufactur­ing platform to have the capability of evolving.”

Not every technology is likely to succeed. There are thousands of systems being tested across the industry, involving both major manufactur­ing companies to startups and universiti­es. Even the lithium-ion cells used in most electric cars and mobile phones have varying manufactur­ing processes.

“There’s different flavors of lithium-ion, different chemistrie­s, and even within those chemistrie­s there’s different variants on how those are made up,” said TJ Winter, a principal manager at Fluence Corp. Ltd., a U.S. energy storage supplier. “We spend a fair amount of time just screening developmen­ts.”

The competitio­n is getting fiercer as carmakers electrify more of their models and energy-storage units become more prevalent in homes and businesses. Demand for battery capacity is expected to rise to 1,784 gigawatt hours by 2030 from about 100 gigawatt hours currently.

About $16.7 billion has already been spent to install convention­al battery factories around the world, and another $42 billion worth of facilities are expected to be up and running by 2022.

Lithium-ion will remain the dominant power source for electric cars and storage units for the next decade, according to the Internatio­nal Energy Agency. After 2025, new technologi­es are likely to enter the market, the Paris organizati­on said in its latest Electric Vehicle Outlook.

That leaves open the possibilit­y of either current lithium-ion technologi­es falling out of favor or newer projects not measuring up to the incumbents. Either way, some investors are likely to end up with batteries that aren’t economical.

“There’s an enormous amount of bandwidth being created in the world for manufactur­ing of lithium-ion batteries,” said Jeff Chamberlai­n, chief executive officer of Volta Energy Technologi­es LLC, an investment fund with a focus on next-generation storage. “Many investors that we’ve seen are betting on technology that will require new manufactur­ing processes. We see this as a flaw because of the current capacity being built on the planet.”

Taking batteries from a laboratory to the marketplac­e is slow and costly. Scientists are substituti­ng expensive metals such as manganese and nickel for more abundant substances like sulfur and oxygen as they seek to cut costs and weight in battery units.

Conamix, a startup in New York, recently raised $2 million to try to make batteries without cobalt, a rare-earth metal that’s a key ingredient for recharging but that’s largely mined in the wartorn Democratic Republic of the Congo.

Other technologi­es “may not be able to scale because of cheap lithiumion,” said Jeff McDermott, managing partner of Greentech Capital Advisors. “Lithium-ion is definitely going to create pricing pressure on other technologi­es to be deployed. There will be several but not dozens of competing technologi­es because the costs are going to have to be down. It’s going to require scale to achieve those costs.”

 ?? James MacDonald / Bloomberg ?? Lithium-ion batteries like these at the Electrovay­a headquarte­rs have become crucial to a variety of industries, and they’re evolving quickly.
James MacDonald / Bloomberg Lithium-ion batteries like these at the Electrovay­a headquarte­rs have become crucial to a variety of industries, and they’re evolving quickly.

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