this post was submitted on 18 Mar 2024
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It is the world’s biggest battery maker, it powers electric vehicles for Tesla, Volkswagen and BMW, and its EV technology is miles ahead of US offerings, say experts

The world’s two superpowers are so intricately linked that it’s hard to think of a pillar of the economy that hasn’t been strained by tensions between the US and China.

And the next frontline in the economic conflict may be the most fundamental yet: a fight for power itself.

A Chinese company that most people have never heard of is at the heart of the global race to store the clean energy needed to power the green transition in the US and the rest of the world.

China’s Contemporary Amperex Technology Co Limited, or CATL, is an energy storage specialist that is the world’s largest battery maker for electric vehicles (EVs). But despite the fact that the company controls nearly two-fifths of the world’s EV battery market – and has powered cars made by brands including Tesla, Volkswagen and BMW – it has long flown under the radar of US politics. Until now.

In February, Duke Energy, a US energy company that serves more than 8 million customers, said it was phasing out the use of CATL batteries. Duke said it would replace the CATL products with technology from a “domestic or allied nation supplier”.

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[–] [email protected] 29 points 8 months ago (6 children)

I love the framing "...that has the US worried", as if better battery technology isn't a win for consumers everywhere, and the only people who are 'worried' are US battery manufacturers who haven't kept up with technological advances, and the government who want to keep encouraging US companies to not use (objectively better) batteries from China.

It sounds like the 'worry' is "Our technology is years behind a political rival, and people are starting to notice".

If this is actually a bad thing for me, as a consumer, and I'm mis-reading the situation, please feel free to educate me.

[–] credo 11 points 8 months ago (3 children)

The worry is with supply chains. If an entire industry is reliant on a country who is antagonistic to outsiders, then that is an obvious cause for concern.

[–] Harderthanstoan 7 points 8 months ago* (last edited 8 months ago) (1 children)

Exactly. And the amount of mining around the world that China owns is absurd. Pair that with 85%+ of the world's material processing for batteries being in China, the rest of the world is in a situation where essentially all batteries will have to go through China

[–] [email protected] 3 points 8 months ago

I'm actually hoping new battery tech kills this off. My hope is aluminium batteries, they are at the point where they are making batteries on a small scale so production isn't that far off.

But aluminium has all the pros over lithium, higher storage in weight and volume, faster to charge, safer and made from the most abundant material in the ground.

Also perovskite might similarly come online soon and could kill of silicone panels.

We can only hope!

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