China's CATL is planning a major expansion of battery swapping for
electric vehicles
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[December 18, 2024] By
KEN MORITSUGU and NG HAN GUAN
XIAMEN, China (AP) — The world's largest maker of batteries for electric
vehicles said Wednesday it will get into battery swapping in China in a
big way starting next year.
The idea behind battery swapping is to refuel quickly, similar to
filling a conventional car with gas. Instead of waiting for the
batteries to recharge, one swaps out the old ones with a block of fresh
ones at a swap station.
China-based CATL announced plans to open 1,000 swap stations next year
in China, including in Hong Kong and Macao, with a long-term goal of
10,000 stations built with partners. If the company follows through, it
could rival Nio, a 10-year-old Chinese electric car brand that has
opened more than 2,700 stations and has plans for at least 5,000.
Nothing on that scale exists elsewhere in the world, though Nio has
about 60 swap stations in northern Europe. Such a large investment is
possible in China, where government support has transformed the world's
largest auto market into a heavily electric one and made the country a
leader in EV technology.
“By 2030, battery swapping, home charging, and public charging stations
will share the market,” Robin Zeng, the CEO of CATL, predicted at a
splashy presentation in southeast China's Fujian province, where CATL is
based. He appealed to corporate partners to work together to "build more
convenient, more economical and safer services for customers, promoting
a brand-new way of life.”
Battery swapping faces hurdles. It requires a standardization of the
battery pack so the swap stations can handle it, and most EVs have their
own configuration. Conversely, an electric car can use any charging
station in China because all use a common plug, and fast-charging
technology is reducing the time for a recharge.
Jing Yang, a Fitch Ratings director who focuses on China’s auto and
renewable energy sectors, said automakers may be concerned that adopting
a standard battery pack could cede too much control of their supply
chain to others. But some may want to test the waters to see if battery
swapping can improve sales, and doing so with CATL or Nio could reduce
the cost, she said.
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China auto market analyst Lei Xing believes that swapping can complement
the country's well-developed charging network. “I don’t see it becoming
mainstream, but I do see it becoming a key part of that infrastructure
landscape,” he said.
Michael Davidson, a renewable energy expert at the University of
California, San Diego, believes that charging will dominate "and maybe
there’ll be some battery swapping options mixed in there.”
The concept has proven easier to implement with fleet vehicles — taxis,
buses and commercial trucks — that have a standard model and, in some
cases, stick to set routes. CATL, which launched a small pilot project
two years ago aimed at taxis, will start its rollout with fleets and
expand to individual car owners later, said Zhang Kai, the deputy
president of CATL's battery swapping subsidiary.
Swapping is still faster than fast-charging. The CATL station, branded
EVOGO, can change a battery pack in 100 seconds, said Yang Jun, the CEO
of the subsidiary. Time is money for taxi and truck drivers, Lei said.
Wang Wubing, a driver at China’s popular Didi ride-hailing service, said
at an EVOGO station in the city of Xiamen that he swaps batteries to
save time so he can pick up more customers. But it is more expensive
than charging.
Both CATL and Nio have announced agreements with automakers to use their
swap stations. The question is whether enough automakers and drivers
adopt it to raise use of the stations to a profitable level.
___
Moritsugu reported from Beijing. Associated Press video producer Olivia
Zhang and researcher Yu Bing contributed.
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