Panasonic to start building Kansas battery plant next month
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[October 31, 2022] TOKYO
(Reuters) -Japan's Panasonic Holdings Corp said on Monday it will start
building a new battery plant in Kansas in November and aims to begin
mass production by March 2025, targeting North America's fast-growing
market for electric vehicles.
The conglomerate's energy unit said in July it had picked Kansas as the
site for a new plant to supply batteries primarily to Tesla Inc, joining
other battery producers planning massive U.S. investments to qualify for
new EV tax credit rules and to tap that market's potentially massive
demand.
Panasonic said in a statement that it expects initial production
capacity of 30 gigawatt hours per year at the new plant. That's
equivalent to roughly 60% of the company's current annual EV battery
production capacity in Japan and the United States.
Kansas state officials said in July the factory would create up to 4,000
jobs with investment of up to $4 billion, pending final approval by
Panasonic's board, which came through on Monday.
Hirokazu Umeda, Panasonic Holdings Group chief financial officer,
declined to give a specific figure for the investment at an earnings
briefing on Monday, but said as a rough estimate that it would be "on a
scale of more than $4 billion" .
The company said the factory would produce its 2170 model lithium-ion
battery cells, which are already supplied to Tesla, but may eventually
make the more advanced 4680 format battery currently under development
that is about five times larger and will offer major improvements in
cost and vehicle range.
"We decided to start with the 2170 model, which can be launched with a
sense of certainty and speed because of the need for batteries as soon
as possible," Umeda said.
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A logo of Panasonic Corp is pictured at
the Combined Exhibition of Advanced Technologies at the Makuhari
Messe in Chiba, Japan, October 2, 2017. REUTERS/Toru Hanai/File
Photo
Panasonic has said it would begin mass production of the 4680 model
at its plant in Wakayama, in western Japan, by the end of March
2024, with expansion later to production in North America.
Umeda said the ramp up to mass production was proceeding as planned.
Panasonic on Monday also lowered its full-year operating profit
forecast to 320 billion yen ($2.16 billion) from 360 billion yen for
the year ending March 31. That compares with a 349.9 billion yen
average forecast by 19 analysts.
Panasonic posted an 11% drop in second-quarter operating profit, but
performed better than analysts' estimates.
It reported 86.1 billion yen in operating profit for the three
months to end-September, versus an average 81.6 billion yen profit
estimated by nine analysts, according to Refinitiv data. A year
earlier, the company earned 96.8 billion yen.
Although sales rose at its energy business, operating profit fell
due to rising prices for raw materials and logistics, as well as
increased development expenses and fixed costs as it increased
production.
Its rivals, China's CATL and South Korea's Energy Solution, posted
strong battery profit growth after they passed some of their cost
increases to clients.
($1 = 147.9800 yen)
(Reporting by Satoshi Sugiyama; Editing by Edmund Klamann)
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