Skip to main content

Continental and SK Innovation team up on battery technology

South Korean company SK Innovation and international automotive supplier Continental, have signed an agreement founding a jointly managed company to develop and supply battery technology for the automotive industry. The know-how of both firms will be concentrated in this new company with the goal of mutually developing, producing and globally marketing lithium-ion battery systems for cars.
July 25, 2012 Read time: 2 mins
RSSSouth Korean company 4222 SK Innovation and international automotive supplier 260 Continental, have signed an agreement founding a jointly managed company to develop and supply battery technology for the automotive industry. The know-how of both firms will be concentrated in this new company with the goal of mutually developing, producing and globally marketing lithium-ion battery systems for cars.

SK Innovation will hold a 51% stake in the new company, Continental 49%. The business strategies of the two firms will remain unaffected by the joint management of this new company. Both companies will continue to supply their customers in the automotive industry with their entire existing product range. The venture, which will be managed operationally from Berlin, is slated to start business in the fourth quarter of this year. Its research and development activities will be carried out in Daejon, South Korea, in addition to Berlin. Production, marketing and sales will be set up locally in the target markets worldwide. Initially, there will be about 200 employees worldwide, with both partner companies providing equal portions of the workforce.

Continental and SK Innovation anticipate that, as CO2 regulations become more stringent worldwide, electrically assisted drives and pure electric vehicles will become increasingly important in the market. And the battery is one of the key components of these technologies. The new joint company will draw on the expertise of the two technology leaders behind it: SK Innovation is providing its well-founded know-how in the development of battery cells, which are technologically at the cutting edge in this field with respect to energy or power density, depending on the design. In addition, SK Innovation is one of the leading suppliers of separators. Meanwhile, Continental has many years of experience in developing and producing battery electronics and entire battery systems as well as integrating them into the vehicle.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Q&A: Datacard Group
    November 4, 2014
    Melissa Prosen, director of brand and communications for Datacard Group, tells CARTES Daily News about the acquisition of Entrust, future roadmaps and the Internet of Things
  • R&D on autonomous, connected and electric vehicles creates growth opportunities, says research
    September 18, 2017
    As the automotive industry faces narrowing margins, the need to look to other revenue streams and keep the customer committed to the brand for their next purchase is paramount, says Frost & Sullivan. Automotive manufacturers are therefore focusing on research and development (R&D) on autonomous, connected, and electrification (ACE) technologies to build fully connected and completely autonomous vehicles. To thrive in this highly competitive, evolving market, manufacturers need to look beyond seeing themselv
  • IIID Expert Forum - call for speakers
    May 18, 2012
    The International Institute for Information Design (IIID) has issued a call for speakers for the 6th IIID Expert Forum Traffic & Transport Information Systems, being held on 8-9 September, 2011, in Vienna Austria. This year's event is focused on Traffic, Transport and Social Media, and in addition to the main conference, Innovations in traffic & transport information is a special session focused on innovative projects and results beyond real time information. The session is geared to the interests of inform
  • Young Tae Kim takes office as ITF Secretary-General
    August 22, 2017
    The International Transport Forum (ITF) at the OECD has a new Secretary-General. Dr Young Tae Kim, a Korean national, took up his position at the organisation’s Paris headquarters on 21 August. Kim is the first non-European to lead the world’s only all-modes transport organisation. The ITF acts as a policy think tank for its 59 member countries and organises the annual summit of transport ministers. Created as global intergovernmental transport organisation in 2006, the ITF evolved out of the European