Skip to main content

Winners in electric vehicle batteries

According to market analyst IDTechEx, which tracks the development of 45 electric vehicle categories and not just electric cars, there are now lithium-ion battery options for everything from forklifts and mobility vehicles for the disabled to e-bikes. Indeed, almost all the e-bikes in the West and Japan use them. 8000 forklifts in the USA have fuel cells with lithium-ion batteries though the Toyota Mirai fuel cell car and the Prius hybrid car still use NiMH. Whilst capturing market in micro hybrid cars,
July 13, 2015 Read time: 3 mins
According to market analyst 6582 IDTechEx, which tracks the development of 45 electric vehicle categories and not just electric cars, there are now lithium-ion battery options for everything from forklifts and mobility vehicles for the disabled to e-bikes. Indeed, almost all the e-bikes in the West and Japan use them. 8000 forklifts in the USA have fuel cells with lithium-ion batteries though the Toyota Mirai fuel cell car and the Prius hybrid car still use NiMH.

Whilst capturing market in micro hybrid cars, lead-acid batteries are being squeezed out of other categories of pure and hybrid electric vehicles. Lithium-ion batteries are the norm for the pure electric car market which is up a remarkable 55% in 2014 on 2013. They are also the norm in plug-in vehicles from buses to cars and military vehicles.

The bottom line is that lithium-ion batteries have no serious rivals for the coming decade if we talk percentage market share as outlined in the IDTechEx report Analysis of over 140 Lithium-based Rechargeable Battery Manufacturers: Chemistry, Strategy, Success.

So who is winning with these batteries in EVs? 5445 BYD claims leadership but that appears to be in numbers when MWh is a better metric. Here 598 Panasonic was well ahead again in 2014 with 2,726 MWh followed by AESC at 1,620 then 954 LG Chem 886 MWh and BYD 461MWh, closely followed by 4962 Mitsubishi/GS Yuasa 451 MWh and 1809 Samsung 314 MWh as it gives preference to phones. Of those only BYD and Mitsubishi also make the vehicles. However the tables might turn in the following years as LG Chem became in 2015 the largest manufacturer of automotive battery packs. Indeed, LG Chem is supplying thirteen different global automakers out of the top 20 global brands, including 1959 GM, 278 Ford, 1684 Hyundai, 2453 Renault and this year 2069 Daimler joined his ranks.

Dr Peter Harrop, leader of the EV team at analysts IDTechEx comments, “Profits are another thing of course but we expect some of the leaders to be profitable in the blood bath of now 200 manufacturers of lithium-ion capacitors with chronic over-supply even before the planned Tesla Gigafactory. Many will go to the wall. We observe that, although the lithium iron phosphate (cathode) batteries are made by the largest number of these manufacturers, they are not winning the leadership stakes partly because energy density is key for most EVs. The battery chemistry with largest battery production will be by far NMC in the following years”.

“Lithium titanate is still a minor part of the business though taking market share. 5392 Toshiba for example is marketing them in micro and mild hybrid cars. The term actually refers to the anode and such anodes, giving benefits such as improved cycle life, are made with five different cathode types. For now, good old graphite anodes win but a large number of companies are developing silicon-based anodes for EV batteries. Clearly there is a robust competition with consensus that costs will at least halve in the coming decade further boosting the market. As with production of electric vehicles themselves, the Japanese are winning but the Koreans and Chinese are forces to be reckoned with. The elephant in the room is 1686 Toyota, by far the biggest EV manufacturer in the world and having one of the most impressive patent portfolios and ongoing battery research programs. Another fascinating development this year is XALT of the USA landing a one billion dollar order for lithium-ion batteries for Chinese buses based on a superior anode and cathode”.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Australia ‘must choose an electric car charging norm’
    September 19, 2013
    According to Professor Thomas Braunl, director of the renewable energy vehicle project at the University of Western Australia, it’s time for Australia to choose a standard for vehicle charging connectors. When the university started Australia’s first electric vehicle trial in Western Australia in 2010, there were no manufacturer-built cars available and locally built conversions had to be used. As of today, Mitsubishi, Nissan, Holden and Tesla offer electric cars in the Australian market. Nearly all inte
  • Hydrogen: transportation's silver bullet?
    June 22, 2021
    As the quest for carbon-neutrality becomes a key political and economic driver, everyone is on the lookout for new sources of energy - so perhaps hydrogen’s time has come
  • California to get electric bus assembly plant
    April 3, 2013
    Chinese electric vehicle (EV) producer BYD is to build an assembly plan in Lancaster, about seventy miles north of Los Angeles, to make electric buses for US and Latin American public transportation markets. The facility will be one of only a few making electric buses in the US, where most buses use diesel fuel or compressed natural gas. Michael Austin, vice president of BYD America, said Lancaster's aggressive embrace of solar energy programs was a factor in deciding to build the plant there. "They've been
  • Biggest change in cars for 100 years now starting, says IDTechEx Research
    December 5, 2016
    According to a new report from IDTechEx Research, Electric Car Technology and Forecasts 2017-2027, the biggest change in cars for one hundred years is now starting. It is driven by totally new requirements and capabilities. They will cause huge new businesses to appear, but some giants will spectacularly go bankrupt. Cities will ban private cars but encourage them as autonomous taxis and rentals. Already 65 per cent of cars in China are bought by businesses. The Japanese want the car to be part of the hy