Volkswagen teams up with Umicore on battery materials
Send a link to a friend
[September 26, 2022]
By Victoria Waldersee
BERLIN (Reuters) - Volkswagen announced on
Monday a $2.9 billion battery parts joint venture with Belgian materials
firm Umicore, becoming the latest European automaker to bring battery
supplies closer to home in the shift towards electric vehicles.
While raw materials - among them lithium, cobalt, nickel and manganese -
will still be largely sourced from across the world, cathode production
for batteries will take place in Europe under the joint venture, most
likely at Umicore's Poland plant.
The venture - between Umicore and Volkswagen's battery unit PowerCo -
also plan to collaborate on recycling metals from battery materials, the
firms said, without giving a timeframe.
Europe's automakers are scrambling to secure stakes in the growing
number of plants on the continent turning raw materials into batteries
as political pressure grows to bring the supply chain, currently
dominated by Asian players, closer to home.
Volkswagen is aiming for 70% of its sales in Europe to be fully electric
vehicles by 2030, and is increasingly trying to fence in its supply
chains by region to protect them from geopolitical tensions and reduce
transport costs.
But Europe's battery industry is still in its infancy, with attempts to
mine raw material in countries from Germany to Portugal held up by red
tape and recycling facilities unable to develop at scale without the raw
material on hand.
Under the 3 billion euro ($2.9 billion) joint venture, which the
companies flagged in December, Umicore will produce enough battery
precursor and cathode material for 160 gigawatt hours (GWh) of battery
capacity - enough for 2.2 million vehicles.
[to top of second column] |
The logo of Volkswagen is displayed at
the carmaker's factory in Puebla, Mexico August 31, 2022.
REUTERS/Imelda Medina
It will start with material for 40 GWh of capacity by 2026 at
Volkswagen's first battery plant in Salzgitter, Germany. The
carmaker plans to build six battery factories in Europe totalling
240 GWh of capacity by 2030.
There is a "strong industrial logic" to locating production at
Umicore's newly inaugurated battery materials plant in Nysa, Poland,
Umicore CEO Mathias Miedreich said, adding a decision would be taken
"rather quickly".
Umicore said last week it saw potential to increase the capacity of
the plant, which began production in July, to over 200 GWh in the
second half of the decade, enough to power around three million
electric vehicles.
The companies also agreed that Umicore would refine cathode material
for the first 60 GWh of capacity.
Shares in the Belgian company plummeted in June after it announced a
5 billion euro plan to bulk up its battery material business, with
analysts concerned about the higher debt and external funding
required amid rising costs.
($1 = 1.0366 euros)
(Reporting by Victoria Waldersee Editing by Jason Neely and Mark
Potter)
[© 2022 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]
This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content.
|